Peter W. Galbraith

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Peter Woodard Galbraith (born December 31, 1950) A.B., M.A., J.D. is a former United States diplomat. He is the son of John Kenneth Galbraith and Catherine (Kitty) Atwater Galbraith. Peter Galbraith holds degrees from the Commonwealth School, Harvard College, Oxford University and Georgetown University Law Center.

Galbraith worked for Senator Claiborne Pell of Rhode Island, and served on the staff of the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee from 1979 to 1993, where he published many reports about Iraq and took a special interest in Kurdistan. In 1993, he was appointed U.S. Ambassador to Croatia by President Bill Clinton. He later served as United Nations ambassador in East Timor. He taught at the National War College (1999, 2001-2003).

Galbraith favors the independence, real or de facto, of Kurdistan, and has worked with Kurdish leaders, including Jalal Talabani and Massoud Barzani, toward that end. In 2003, he resigned from U.S. government after 24 years of service in order to be able to criticize U.S. Iraq policy more freely.

Currently senior diplomatic fellow at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, Peter Galbraith is the author of The End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created a War Without End (2006), which argues that the U.S.'s "main error" in Iraq has been "wishful thinking" and advocates acceptance of a "partition" of Iraq into three parts as part a new U.S. "strategy based on the reality of Iraq" (The End of Iraq, pp. 4, 12, 222, 224).

He and his wife, the Norwegian social anthropologist Tone Bringa, have three children and a home in Townshend, Vermont.

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