 |
 |
War Games |
 |
Moderator: Peter Dombrowski, Watson Institute and Naval War College |
 

 |
Peter Dombrowski is an associate professor in the U.S. Naval War College's
Strategic Research Department. He has published research on international
relations, global finance, foreign economic policymaking and international
assistance to the postcommunist
transition. Dombrowski's publications include Policy Responses to the
Globalization of American Banks (1996) and various articles most recently
"Pax Vobiscum Clausewitz: The Changing Faces of War" in Culture et Conflits
(2000, with Richard Mansbach). He is also the coeditor of International
Studies Quarterly. |
 |
Moderator: Andrew Horesh, Brown University |
 |
Andrew Horesh is a senior at Brown University, concentrating in
international relations and the history of art. He is currently
coeditor-in-chief of the Brown Journal of World Affairs. Horesh is
researching new media and its connections with the recent U.S. led war with
Iraq. |
 |
James F. Dunnigan, The Strategy Page |
 

 |
James F. Dunnigan is an author of books on wargaming, military affairs,
technology, and history. Dunnigan began to develop wargames more than 35
years ago, starting his first game publishing company in the late 1960s. Ten
years later, he wrote The Complete Wargames Handbook and How to Make War.
Dunnigan collaborated with Ray Macedonia to re-establish wargaming at the
Army War College, and is a member of STRICOM's (the Army's wargame
development operation) Technical Advisory Board. |
 |
Col. Jay C. Farrar, USMC (Ret.) |
 

 |
Col. Jay C. Farrar is a former Department of Defense (DOD) deputy assistant
secretary for legislative affairs with active duty in the U.S. Marine Corps
for over 22 years. An expert on national security, homeland security, export
controls, and international trade, Farrar is now a military analyst and vice
president for external relations at CSIS, where he is the primary liaison
with Congress, the Executive Branch, foreign embassies, and the media. From
1998-1999, Farrar was director of legislative affairs for the National
Security Council (NSC). |
 |
Kenneth Watman, Naval War College |
 

 |
Kenneth Watman is the chair of the War Gaming Department at the Naval War
College's Center for Naval Warfare Studies. Watman has worked at the RAND
Corporation and the Office of the Secretary of Defense, as well as within
the U.S. intelligence community. He is the coauthor of several books, most
recently U.S. Nuclear Declaratory Policy: The Question of Nuclear First Use
and U.S. Regional Deterrence Strategies. |
|
 |
|
 |