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Institutional
Affiliations
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies: Member, Board of Advisors (4)
"Inside Washington": Weekly Panelist (3)
New Republic: Contributing Editor (3)
Weekly Standard: Contributing Editor (3)
National Interest: Member, Editorial Board (3)
Public Interest: Member, Editorial Board (3)
Project for the New American Century: Signed PNAC's September 20, 2001 statement on the war on terrorism
Massachusetts General Hospital: Psychiatrist/chief resident (1975-78) (2)
Government
Posts/Panels/Commissions
President's Council on Bioethics: Current member (1)
White House: Speechwriter to Vice President Walter Mondale (1980) (Krauthammer also worked on Mondale's Presidential bid.) (2, 3)
White House: Science Advisor to Carter administration (1978-80) (3)
Education
Harvard Univerity: M.D. (1975) (1, 2)
Oxford University: Commonwealth Scholar in Politics at Balliol College (1970-71) (3)
McGill University: B.A., Political Science and Economics (1970) (3)
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Highlights
& Quotes
Krauthammer, a syndicated columnist and former psychiatrist, has won numerous awards for his writings, including a National Magazine Award and the 1987 Pulitzer for distinguished commentary. A supporter of the Project for the New American Century's campaign pushing for war with Iraq, Krauthammer's op-eds regularly berate liberals and Democrats, champion intervention in the Middle East, and defend the neoconservative agenda.
In an August 2003 Washington Post column, for example, Krauthammer defended the presidential nomination of neocon Daniel Pipes to the U.S. Institute for Peace, which was heavily criticized by members of Congress and many observers because of Pipe's hardline stance on the Middle East and controversial take on Islam. For Krauthammer, however, the "attack on Pipes" was nothing but "another symptom of the absurd political correctness surrounding Islamic radicalism." He continued: "We are all supposed to pretend that we have equal suspicions of terrorist intent and thus must give equal scrutiny to a 70-year-old Irish nun, a 50-year-old Jewish seminarian, and a 30-year-old man from Saudi Arabia. Your daughter is on that plane: To whom do you want the security guards to give their attention? President Bush is considering bypassing the Senate and giving Pipes a recess appointment while Congress is out of town. For Bush, this would be an act of characteristic principle and courage. The problem, however, is that such an act makes the appointment look furtive. Worse, it lets the McCarthyites off too easy." (7)
Here's what Pipes had to say about the war in Iraq: "WMD was never the basic reason for war. Nor was it the horrid repression in Iraq. Or the danger Saddam posed to his neighbors. . . . The campaign in Iraq is about keeping promises to the United States or paying the consequences." (8) Sounds like an ideal candidate for an institute presumably devoted to peace.
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