About the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs is a 100-page
magazine published 9 times per year in Washington, DC, that focuses
on news and analysis from and about the Middle East and U.S. policy
in that region.
The Washington Report is published by the American Educational Trust
(AET), a non-profit foundation incorporated in Washington, DC by
retired U.S. foreign service officers to provide the American public
with balanced and accurate information concerning U.S. relations
with Middle Eastern states.
AET's Foreign Policy Committee has included former U.S. ambassadors,
government officials, and members of Congress, including the late
Democratic Senator J. William Fulbright, and Republican Senator
Charles Percy, both former chairmen of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. Members of AET's Board of Directors and advisory committees
receive no fees for their services.
The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs does not take
partisan domestic political positions. As a solution to the Palestinian-Israeli
dispute, it endorses U.N. Security Council Resolution 242īs land-for-peace
formula, supported by seven successive U.S. presidents. In general,
the Washington Report supports Middle East solutions which it judges
to be consistent with the charter of the United Nations and traditional
American support for human rights, self-determination, and fair
play.
Material from the printed version of the Washington Report,
and from this Web site, may be reprinted without charge as long
as articles are not changed in any way and are credited to the
author
and the magazine. [This release does not apply to any of the photographs
or graphic designs in the printed magazine or this Web site.]
Founders
The American Educational Trust was founded in Washington,
DC in January, 1982. Its founding chairman was Edward
Firth Henderson, a British Army Officer during World War
II who served in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East.
Co-founders were Andrew I. Killgore,
AET's first president, who was U.S. Ambassador to the State of
Qatar when he retired
from
the U.S. Foreign Service in 1980; and Richard H. Curtiss,
AET's first executive director, who was chief inspector of the
U.S. Information Agency when he retired from the U.S. Foreign
Service
in 1980.
In addition to the three founding directors, other initial
directors of the American Educational Trust were Prof. John
Ruedy, director of studies at Georgetown University's Center for
Contemporary Arab Studies; former Democratic Member of Congress Thomas
Rees
of Los Angeles; John Law, Middle East correspondent
for U.S. News & World Report for some 20 years before he founded
Mideast Markets, a publication of the Chase Manhattan Bank; and Dr.
John Duke Anthony, president and chief executive officer
of the National Council on U.S. Arab Relations.
Subsequent board chairmen have included Dr. John Davies,
former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Agriculture and director of
the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), and the
current
chairman, the Reverend Dr. L. Humphrey
Walz, former associate
executive of the Presbyterian synod of the Northeast.
Masthead
Publisher:
Andrew I. Killgore
Executive Editor:
Richard H. Curtiss
Managing Editor:
Janet McMahon
News Editor:
Delinda C. Hanley
Book Club Director:
Matt Horton
Administrative Director:
Jamal Najjab
Art Director:
Ralph Scherer
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