Students Get a Firsthand View of Foreign Policy Work in Qatar

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The Dickey Center鈥檚 War and Peace Fellows meet with policy leaders in the Gulf state.

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Persian Gulf across the harbor from the Qatari
The students of the War and Peace Fellows stand on the Persian Gulf across the harbor from the Qatari capital of Doha. (Photo by Benjamin Valentino) 
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Pictured above, standing from left, 天美影视 Benjamin Valentino, Debora Han 鈥20, Sarah Drescher 鈥20, Carson Smith 鈥23, Karla Rosas 鈥20, Paulomi Rao 鈥19, Priya Sankar 鈥19, Alexandra Curnin 鈥19, front row from left, Heeju Kim 鈥19, Anisha Ariff 鈥19, Soham Basu 鈥20.

Students in the War and Peace Fellows program traveled to Qatar during winter break, attending the Doha Forum, a high-level international affairs summit, and meeting with U.S. and Qatari diplomats in the Persian Gulf state.

A group of 10 undergraduates heard from speakers at the Doha conference, including U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres, 2018 Nobel Peace Prize winner Nadia Murad鈥攁 member of the Yazidi ethnic minority of Iraq鈥攁nd Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. In addition, the students visited the offices of Al Jazeera news and met with Qatari officials involved in planning the World Cup soccer games in Doha in 2022.

鈥淨atar has played an outsized role in global affairs for some time now鈥攊n part because of its wealth and in part because of its active diplomacy鈥攁nd the quality of the participants in the Doha Forum is a sign of that. It鈥檚 remarkable to have so many luminaries in one place at one time,鈥 says , the Norman E. McCulloch Jr. Director of the , which sponsors the War and Peace Fellows program.

鈥淚鈥檓 grateful to the Embassy of Qatar in Washington, D.C., for making this possible. This was the kind of experience that few students anywhere will get,鈥 Benjamin says.

The students also had a chance to talk with top foreign affairs experts, including senior diplomats in the U.S. embassy and then-U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS Brett McGurk. (McGurk resigned his position later in December following the departure of Defense Secretary James Mattis.)

鈥淨atar is at the center of an extraordinarily tense situation in the Gulf region now because of the blockade that Saudi Arabia and the UAE are conducting against this tiny country. For the students to meet Qatari and U.S. officials as well as any array of scholars and experts during this trip was a sort of real-time, up-close experience of a major international relations dust-up. We all got a tremendous amount out of it,鈥 says Benjamin.

Sarah Drescher 鈥20, a government and quantitative social science double major, says she is grateful for the opportunity to visit a part of the world she likely would never see otherwise.

鈥淭he group was also fortunate enough to see both the American Embassy in Qatar and the Qatari Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Getting to hear from and interact with high-level foreign policymakers at Dartmouth through the Dickey Center is already a massive privilege, but being able to do so in Qatar was an incredible and unparalleled experience,鈥 she says.

Associate 天美影视 of Government Benjamin Valentino, coordinator of the War and Peace Fellows, says the trip was 鈥渁 one-of-a-kind opportunity and something that students at very few other institutions would have a chance to do. It was just an extraordinary experience for all of them.鈥

Debora Han 鈥20 says the insight and context that Valentino and Benjamin shared with the students before and during the trip were invaluable.

鈥淭heir presence with all of us on the trip really made the trip something special and something that I learned a lot from,鈥 she says.

William Platt can be reached at william.c.platt@dartmouth.edu.

Bill Platt