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We encourage the media to contact our fellows directly with interview requests. To view an index of the Council’s experts, click here. If you have any questions, call the Communications Department at +1.212.434.9888.
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The Communications Department sends out a weekly e-mail with original Council content, expert interviews, transcripts, backgrounders, fellows’ op-eds, and more to the press, Council members, and the public. If you are a journalist and you are on our press list, you will receive this e-mail automatically along with our press releases and meeting invitations. Click here to view this week’s e-mail.
The majority of the Council’s on-the-record meetings are transcribed. You can view transcripts or listen to audio of Council meetings.
To view the Council’s annual reports online, click here. If you wish to receive a hardcopy of one of our annual reports, you can e-mail your request to publications@cfr.org, or call +1.212.434.9665. Be sure to include your complete mailing address, phone number, and the year of the annual report that you wish to receive.
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For general inquiries, call or email us: +1-212-434-9888 or communications@cfr.org
About the Communications Department
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Council Experts are based in the Council’s New York and Washington offices. Each expert's bio page contains his or her contact information, professional and educational history, links to publications and current research, a downloadable one-page biographical narrative, and a high-definition photo.
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Iraq (5/8): Mohamad Bazzi urges the U.S. and Iraqi governments not to exclude Muqtada al-Sadr from the political process, in The National.
Campaign 2008 (5/5): It would be a travesty if Obama’s campaign gets knocked off course because of his former preacher, writes Sebastian Mallaby in the Washington Post.
Iraq War (5/3): Max Boot argues that the increase in casualties could be a sign that tough combat is under way that will lead to the enemy’s defeat, in the Wall Street Journal.
U.S. Economy (5/2): Amity Shlaes criticizes Hillary Clinton’s plan to implement a windfall oil tax, on Bloomberg.com.
Food Crisis (5/1): Gene Sperling warns that one of the casualties of the food crisis will be the schooling of the world’s poorest children, on Bloomberg.com.
Three-Front War (4/30): Michael Gerson argues that a decent outcome in Iraq would be considerably devalued if counterinsurgency efforts in Afghanistan and Pakistan stall, in the Washington Post.
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