Elisa Ewers

Senior Fellow for Middle East Studies

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Expert Bio

Elisa Ewers is a leading practitioner in U.S. national security and foreign policy, with over twenty-five years of experience as a chief advisor in the executive and legislative branches of the U.S. government, as a thought leader and professor in think tanks and academia, and as a strategy consultant in the private sector. Her expertise covers the Middle East and North Africa, Europe, counterterrorism and security cooperation, multilateral institutions, and U.S. national security decision-making.

Ewers served in the Barack Obama and George W. Bush administrations; at the National Security Council; in the Departments of State and Defense; in U.S. embassies, including in conflict zones; in the U.S. Mission to the United Nations; and was selected for Senior Executive Service. Ewers also led the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s policy and legislative work on the Middle East and North Africa, nonproliferation and arms control, and international economics. She has advanced U.S. relations with partners throughout the Middle East and Europe, finding common ground on complex national security issues. She has negotiated complex bipartisan legislation, served as a principal counselor to the most senior leaders in both the executive and legislative branches, and exercised oversight over billions of dollars in U.S. programs.

Ewers’s analysis has appeared in outlets including the Washington Post, Newsweek, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, War on the Rocks, BBC, CNN, NPR, and XM Radio. She served as an adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security and as an adjunct faculty member at The Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. Prior to her government service, Ewers worked in the private sector, consulting and advising on institutional asset management.

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