EastWest Institute

EastWest Institute
Motto Forging Collective Action for a Safer and Better World
Formation 1980
Type Public Policy Think Tank
Headquarters 11 East 26th Street, 20th Floor
Location New York, NY
President & CEO John Edwin Mroz
Website ewi.info

The EastWest Institute (EWI), originally known as the Institute for East West Security Studies, is an international not-for-profit, non-partisan "think and do" tank focusing on international conflict resolution through a variety of means, including track 2 diplomacy and track 1.5 diplomacy (conducted with the direct involvement of official actors), hosting international conferences, and authoring publications on international security issues.

EWI was founded in 1980, when current CEO John Edwin Mroz and Ira D. Wallach set out to address areas of political dispute across the Iron Curtain. By employing networks in political, military, and business establishments in the United States, Europe, and the Soviet Union, EWI established itself as a leading organizer of track 2 negotiations.

EWI has initiatives focused on a number of different areas including cybersecurity, preventive diplomacy, strategic trustbuilding (which encompasses Russia-United States relations and China-United States Relations), Worldwide Security, and Regional Security (focusing on specific areas such as Southwest Asia).

In addition to its New York City Headquarters, EWI has offices in Brussels, Belgium and Moscow, Russia.

Contents

History

In 1984, EWI hosted the first ever track 2 military-to-military discussions between the NATO and Warsaw Pact countries.These talks, focusing heavily on the establishment of confidence-building measures (CBMs) between the two parties, ultimately resulted in an agreement requiring each side to alert the other of troop movements.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the eruption of conflicts in Southeastern Europe, EWI worked to foster economic stability in the region, encouraging cross-border cooperation and training leaders for democratic states. In the 2000s (decade), EWI’s operations expanded geographically to China, Southwest Asia and the Middle East, focusing on issues like cybersecurity, economic security, and countering violent extremism.

In May 2009, EWI released a Joint Threat Assessment on Iran, produced by senior U.S. and Russian experts convened by the Institute. The assessment, which concluded that the planned system would not protect against an Iranian nuclear threat,[1] helped inform the Obama administration's decision to scrap the ballistic missile defense plan proposed by the Bush administration and replace it with a plan of its own.[2]

Initiatives

Strategic Trustbuilding

EWI's Strategic Trustbuilding Initiative includes its work with Russia, China, and the United States. Through its work with Russia, EWI has sought to "build a sustainable relationship of trust between Russia, its G-8 partners, and the world’s new rising powers."[3] This program was responsible for establishing the 2009 Joint Threat Assessment on Iran. The China program, which was initiated in 2006, seeks to foster China's integration into the international sphere as a productive partner. An example of EWI's China work is the establishment of annual three-party talks between Republican Party, Democratic Party, and Chinese Communist Party leaders.

Regional Security

This program addresses specific regional problems requiring the attention of the international community. Current issues include: security and stability in Afghanistan & Southwest Asia, and Euro-Atlantic security. Regional Security is directly involved with the Parliamentarians Network for Conflict Prevention—a network, founded by EWI in October 2008, that has since grown to include 150 parliamentarians from more than 50 countries. Members of the network work to translate ideas into policy as well as advocate for a greater allocation of resources for preventive action.

Worldwide Security Initiative

The focus of EWI's Worldwide Security Initiative is the annual Worldwide Security Conference, first held in 2003, which assembles experts from governments, the private sector, NGOs, and academia to explore issues such as countering violent extremism, securing infrastructure, and energy security. The Worldwide Security Initiative also incorporates EWI's work in Weapons of Mass Destruction issues. The WMD program, which began in 2006, aims to reduce political obstacles to the elimination of the threat of nuclear weapons. EWI organized a series of events and meetings in 2007 and 2008 to address stalled arms discussions in the international community. The most prominent of these was Seizing the Moment: Breakthrough Measures to Build a New East-West Consensus on Weapons of Mass Destruction and Disarmament, a consultation at the United Nations on UN Day, October 24, 2008.

The Worldwide Cybersecurity Initiative is a part of the WSI. It aims to reduce vulnerabilities in governmental and private cybersecurity policies by developing consensus proposals for new agreements and policy reform. The institute's chief method of achieving this goal has been the hosting of the Worldwide Cybersecurity Summit, an annual meeting of governmental and corporate actors in the field, first held in May 2010 at Dallas, Texas, which established policy recommendations for securing international cyber infrastructure.[4]

References

  1. ^ Ellen Barry, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/20/world/europe/20start.html "U.S. and Russia Begin Arms Talks With a December Deadline", The New York Times, May 19th, 2009
  2. ^ Peter Spiegel, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125314575889817971.html "U.S. to Shelve Nuclear-Missile Shield", The Wall Street Journal, September 17th, 2009
  3. ^ EastWest Institute List of Programs, http://www.ewi.info/programs
  4. ^ Protecting the Digital Economy: The First Worldwide Cybesecurity Summit in Dallas, http://dl.dropbox.com/u/869038/Dallas2010.pdf

External links