Gideon Rose

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Gideon Rose is the Managing Editor of Foreign Affairs, and served on the National Security Council during the Clinton Administration. He has been educated at the Horace Mann School, Yale University, where he was a member of Scroll and Key Society, and Harvard University.

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[edit] Career

In 1985, Rose was appointed assistant editor of The National Interest[1], a foreign policy quarterly. He then went on to hold a similar position at a domestic quarterly -- The Public Interest[2]. He received his Ph.D. in government from Harvard University, and served as Associate Director for Near East and South Asian Affairs on the National Security Council from 1994 to 1995.[3]

In 1996, he joined Princeton's Politics Department as a lecturer on American foreign policy, before holding a similar position at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia.

He was an Olin Senior Fellow and the Deputy Director of National Security Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations from 1995 to 2000 [4], before he was appointed Managing Editor of Foreign Affairs, replacing Fareed Zakaria[5]. He has held this position since.

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