Featured Publications
Beyond Attribution: Seeking National Responsibility in Cyberspace
Kazakhstan and the United States: Twenty Years of Ambiguous Partnership
The Five Futures of Cyber Conflict and Cooperation
US Lessons for the Eurozone Restoring Confidence through Transparency
Prospects and Challenges for Increasing India-Pakistan Trade
Council News
Barbara Slavin on Iran's Nuclear Program with CBC Radio
Barbara Slavin, senior fellow at the Atlantic Council's South Asia Center and member of the Iran Task Force, appeared on CBC Radio to discuss the West's response to recent announcements of Iran moving steps closer to nuclear weapon production capabilities.
Michele Dunne Testifies on Egypt’s Deteriorating Economy
On February 15, Michele Dunne testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs on Egypt’s deepening economic crisis and its implications for the democratic transition.
Michele Dunne on CNN to Discuss Syria and Egypt
On February 15, Michele Dunne, director of the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East, appeared on CNN Newsroom to discuss the crisis in
FEATURED ISSUE
One year after the fall of Hosni Mubarak, with popular upheavals continuing to roil the Arab world, it is increasingly clear that Europe can no longer sit still and do nothing.
REGISTER
Biography
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Barry Pavel

Barry Pavel is Director of the International Security Program and Director-Designate of the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security at the Atlantic Council, focusing on emerging security challenges, defense strategies and capabilities, and key European and global defense issues.
Prior to joining the Atlantic Council, he was a career member of the Senior Executive Service in the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy for almost eighteen years. From October 2008 through July 2010, he served as the Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Defense Policy and Strategy on the National Security Council staff, serving both President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama.
In this capacity, Mr. Pavel led the development of five of the first eight Obama Administration Presidential Study Directives. He was the initiator and architect of the NSC’s first-ever National Security Priorities Review and a key contributor to the President’s 2010 National Security Strategy; led the NSC’s oversight of the four Defense Department strategic reviews (the Quadrennial Defense Review, Nuclear Posture Review, Ballistic Missile Defense Review, and space posture review), including the President’s September 2009 decision on European missile defense and all Presidential decisions on nuclear policy and posture; co-led the development of the President’s June 2010 National Space Policy; and contributed to the President’s policies on Europe and NATO, Korea, cyberspace, DoD operational plans and activities, military family policy, and other matters.
Prior to this position, Mr. Pavel was the Chief of Staff and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations/Low-Intensity Conflict & Interdependent Capabilities. He helped Assistant Secretary of Defense Michael Vickers develop policy on the capabilities and operational employment of special operations forces, strategic forces, and conventional forces. His main areas of work covered strategic capabilities policy, including development of the first Department of Defense cyber deterrence strategy and better aligning the Department’s approach to cyberspace activities and capabilities with defense strategy and policy.
From October 1993 through November 2006, Mr. Pavel led or contributed to a broad range of defense strategy and planning initiatives for both the Clinton and George W. Bush Administrations. He led the Clinton Administration’s development of the Defense Planning Guidance and the defense planning for the first round of NATO enlargement. He also contributed to President Clinton’s National Security Strategies and the 1997 Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR). As the Principal Director for Strategy, he also played a leading role in the conduct of the 2001 QDR, the global defense posture realignment, and the development of the 2005 U.S. National Defense Strategy. Other main work areas included: the Secretary of Defense’s Security Cooperation Guidance and the first Interagency Security Cooperation Strategy Conference; the Unified Command Plan; post-9-11 deterrence policy (including deterrence of terrorist networks and regional nuclear powers); strategies for reducing ungoverned areas; and a long-range planning construct that accounts for trends and “strategic shocks” that could significantly change DoD’s role in national security.
Mr. Pavel received a Presidential Rank Award in 2007 in recognition of his career accomplishments. He also has served as a key advisor to Policy leadership on civil service professional development and mentorship.
Mr. Pavel holds an MA in Security Studies and an MPA in International Relations from Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School, and a BA in Applied Mathematics and Economics from Brown University.
While at Princeton, he was a founding Editorial Board Member of the Journal of Public and International Affairs. He also served in the Office of the Defense Advisor, U.S. Mission to NATO, and as a consultant to the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment.
Prior to Princeton, Mr. Pavel served in the Strategy, Forces, and Resources Division of the Institute for Defense Analyses, where he specialized in research on force planning and co-authored numerous IDA reports and publications.
Mr. Pavel, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, speaks and writes on a wide range of foreign and security policy issues. He also is a Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
He can be contacted at bpavel@acus.org. For appointment requests, please contact Huihui Ooi at hooi@acus.org.
FEATURED EVENTS
Libya Revisited: Coalition Building and the Future of NATO Operations

On February 14, the Atlantic Council’s International Security Program hosted a Commanders Series public address and discussion with General Charles Bouchard, commander of the NATO military mission in Libya.
The Way Forward in Europe

Luxembourg’s Finance Minister Luc Frieden visited the Atlantic Council for an important speech and discussion on the future of the Eurozone on February 13. The event was part of the ongoing Mapping the Economic and Financial Future Speakers’ Forum co-hosted by the Council’s Global Business and Economics Program and Deutsche Bank.
Pivotal Partnerships: The Prospects for International Defense Cooperation in an Age of Austerity

On Wednesday, February 15, Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter joined the Atlantic Council for a public address and conversation on international defense cooperation.
FEATURED INTERVIEW
Is Nigeria at a Crossroad?
In this edition of the New Atlanticist Podcast, Atlantic Council senior fellow Sarwar Kashmeri speaks to Mr. Tutu Agyare, founder and managing partner of Nubuke Investments, one of Africas’s largest asset managers.


















