Richard H. Curtiss
Washington
Report Executive
Editor Richard H. Curtiss enlisted in the U.S. Army in World
War II, and served as a military correspondent in Berlin, Germany
after the war. After earning a B.A. in journalism from the
University of Southern California and work on newspapers and
for United Press in California, he served as a career foreign
service officer with the Department of State and the U.S. Information
Agency in Djakarta, Bonn, Stuttgart, Ankara, Beirut (three
times), Baghdad, Damascus and Rhodes, Greece, where he headed
the Arabic Service of the Voice of America, and in various
positions in Washington DC.
During
his U.S. government career he received the U.S. Information Agency's
Superior Honor Award for his service as Embassy Counselor for
Public Affairs in Lebanon during the civil war there, and the
Edward R. Murrow award for excellence in Public Diplomacy, U.S.I.A.'s
highest professional recognition.
Following his retirement from the U.S. Foreign Service
in 1980, Mr. Curtiss was a co-founder of the American Arab Affairs
Council (now the Middle East Policy Council) in 1981 and the Council
for the National Interest in 1984, remaining on the initial board
of directors of each of those organizations for one year. Since
he co-founded the American Educational Trust in 1982, its magazine,
the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs, has received an award
from the National Association of Arab-Americans in 1993.
For
his work as its executive editor, Mr. Curtiss received awards
from the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) in
1992, from the Council for the National Interest (CNI) and Partners
for Peace in 1993, from the United Muslims of America and the
Islamic Association for Palestine in North America in 1994 and
from the Jerusalem Fund for Education and Community Development
and the Center for Policy Analysis on Palestine in 1995.
Mr.
Curtiss has written two books on U.S.-Middle East relations.
The first, A Changing Image: American Perceptions of the Arab-Israeli
Dispute, was published in 1982 and commended for its objectivity
by all three then-living ex-Presidents of the United States,
Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Jimmy Carter. An updated second
edition was published in 1986.
His
second book is Stealth PACs: Lobbying Congress for Control
of U.S. Middle East Policy. The first three editions were
published in 1990, 1991 and 1992. A fourth, updated edition was
published in 1997. |