"From Camp David to 9/11 - Did
We Bring It On Ourselves?"
Watch the Complete Talk by
Mark
Bruzonsky and the Question and Answers below:
Other University Talks:
Lawrence
University Lecture Series Explores U.S. Foreign Policy Challenges
with the Middle East
APPLETON, WIS. - Lawrence
University Press Release - 3 January 2003 The
religious and political tinderbox that is the
Middle East and the region's relationship with the United States will
be
explored by national scholars and foreign affairs experts beginning
January 16
in a five-part Lawrence University lecture series entitled "War and
Peace in
the Middle East." All lectures in the month-long
series will be held at 7 p.m. in Science
Hall, Room 102 on the Lawrence campus and are free and open to the
public.
Bruce Jones,
deputy director of the
Center for International Cooperation
at New York University, opens the series Thursday, Jan. 16 with the
address
"The Politics of the Middle East Peace Process: Past Failures, Future
Challenges."
Jan. 23 -- John
Mearsheimer, R.
Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service
Professor in Political Science and co-director of the Program on
International
Security Policy at the University of Chicago, "U.S. Policy in the
Middle East:
A Sure Way to Lose the War Against al Qaeda."
Jan. 30 -- Robert
Lieber, professor
of government and foreign service at
Georgetown University, "The United States and the Iraqi Crisis."
Feb. 5 -- Rashid
Khalidi, director of
the Center for International Studies at
the University of Chicago, "United States Policy and the Arab-Israeli
Conflict."
Feb.
12 -- Mark Bruzonsky, a 1969 Lawrence graduate and former associate
editor of Worldview Magazine and current publisher of Mid-East
Realities,
"From Camp David to 9/11 ‹ Did We Bring It On Ourselves?"
The "War and Peace in the Middle
East" lecture series is sponsored by the
Mojmir Povolny Lectureship in International Studies. Named in honor of
long-time Lawrence government professor Mojmir Povolny, the lectureship
promotes interest and discussion on issues of moral significance and
ethical
dimensions.
There
are 3 videos of this evening that follow - 48 minutes, 45
minutes, and 31 minutes
These are not professional videos. Rather they were taken
with a stationary unmanned camera without proper lighting and often not
quite on center.
But if you
turn the volume up you will be able to hear the talk, see
the speaker and the audience most of the time, and listen to the
questions and answers.