Top Biden Aide Jake Sullivan Headlines Dickey Forum

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Initiative for Global Security event draws Washington and academic experts.

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William Wohlforth, Jake Sullivan, and Victoria Holt
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, center, in conversation with government professor William Wohlforth and Dickey Center director Victoria K. Holt at a security forum in Washington last month. (Photo by Sydney Tucker/The Stimson Center)
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National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan opened the Dartmouth International Security Forum in Washington with a discussion of the Biden Administration鈥檚 strategic thinking on the Russia-Ukraine war and China鈥檚 posture toward Taiwan.

Sullivan, who held a teaching residency at the  from 2019 to 2020, joined some 60 top-level national security experts from the Biden administration, think tanks, and academia, many of them Dartmouth alumni, professors, or postdocs.

The May 12-13 forum was the first in what will become an annual international security conference hosted by the new , dedicated to connecting Dartmouth researchers to the Washington and international policy community, says , the faculty director of the initiative and Daniel Webster 天美影视 at Dartmouth.

The two-day gathering opened with a reception and a conversation with top Pentagon official Colin Kahl, undersecretary of defense for policy. The all-day forum on May 13, titled 鈥淚nternational Grand Strategy and Policymaking: Options for the Biden Administration in a New Security Environment,鈥 featured many high-level administration security experts including Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of Arms Control, Verification, and Compliance Mallory Stewart and Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs Michele Sison.

Blake McGill 鈥22, a government major and War and Peace Fellow who attended as a notetaker for the Dickey Center, says it was incredible to have a window into developing U.S. security policy as it is evolving, with top officials such as Sullivan, former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor, and Thomas Wright, National Security Council special assistant to the president.

鈥淚t was particularly interesting to see the panel on Russia and Ukraine,鈥 McGill says. 鈥淭he discussions were under the 鈥楥hatham House Rule,鈥 so current administration officials felt that they could be candid about the situation and share their thinking behind policy decisions because there鈥檚 no risk about attribution anywhere.鈥

The Chatham House Rule, named for the headquarters of the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London, allows conference attendees to use any information from a discussion, but without disclosing who made any particular comment, designed to allow open debate about public policy and diplomacy.

鈥淥bviously Ambassador Taylor has a particular perspective having been inside of Ukraine, but it was just very striking because, in a lot of ways, his perspective differed from others on the same panel who were all studying this and watching the news and know it on a more intimate level than the average American does,鈥 says McGill.

Sullivan鈥檚 arrival at the start of the all-day forum, along with his chief of staff and a Secret Service detail, energized the event, says McGill, who had met Sullivan when he was in residence at Dartmouth at a War and Peace event with former U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, and at a West House dinner.

, the Norman E. McCulloch Jr. Director of the Dickey Center, says the inaugural forum, as the Biden Administration is finalizing its national security strategy on Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine, and developing policies toward China, U.S. alliances, and the United Nations system, came at a critical moment for global policy debate.

鈥淚 am delighted that senior U.S. officials came to give us their frank views and seek our expertise, leading to a fantastic dialogue at a challenging time. We know that mixing scholars and policymakers doesn鈥檛 always work, but this forum鈥檚 focus on critical issues succeeded and drove a lively and fruitful exchange,鈥 Holt says. 

Michael Beckley, an associate professor of political science at Tufts University and a 2012 postdoctoral fellow at the Dickey Center, was a panelist in the discussion of U.S.-China relations.

鈥淭he forum was the most important and intellectually stimulating event I鈥檝e attended since before the pandemic,鈥 Beckley says. 鈥淭op national security officials and leading scholars engaging in lively discussions on the most pressing issues with Dartmouth professors, fellows, students, and alumni鈥攊t doesn鈥檛 get any better than that.鈥 

Tahlia Mullen 鈥22, a government and environmental studies major and a War and Peace Fellow who also attended as a notetaker for Dickey, says the event made her appreciate the real-world expertise of Dartmouth faculty.

鈥淪eeing my professors鈥攑eople who I had sat in class with鈥攂eing engaged in these conversations with this really diverse cohort was a reminder to me of how our professors wear many hats. They鈥檙e teachers but then they鈥檙e also really in the mix in D.C.,鈥 Mullen says.

Bill Platt