How Iraqis view Iran’s influence in their country by Ali Mamouri
غياب خطة بديلة لسياسة الطاقة في السعودية by Hadi Fathallah
No Plan B for Saudi Energy Policy by Hadi Fathallah
The Iraqi Military, The US-led Coalition and the Mosul Operation: The Risk of Snatching Defeat from the Jaws of Victory by Norman Ricklefs
Exclusive: U.S. falters in campaign to revive Iraqi army, officials say
By Ned Parker and Jonathan Landay (Reuters)
Apocalypse Not: The Iraqi bloodbath that wasn’t By Jeff Stein (Newsweek)
Was Zahran Alloush really a moderate leader? By Ali Mamouri (Al Monitor)
Ramadi's dirty little secret in the war against ISIS By Jeff Stein (Newsweek)
How Iraq just legalized discrimination of minorities by Ali Mamouri (Al Monitor)
How to rein in Iraq's Popular Mobilization Units by Ali Mamouri (Al Monitor)
Iraqis protest corruption, lack of services while politicians blame everyone but themselves By Ali Mamouri (Al Monitor)
Rivers of Babylon: Iraq's Water Crisis—And What Turkey Should Do by Mukdad Al Jabberi, Norman Ricklefs and Robert Tollast (Foreign Affairs)
The Islamic State is Winning in Iraq - Wall Street Journal
LTG Michael D. Barbero Discusses ISIS on CNN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNbIIemKgsI
Retain a sense of humour: Iraq adviser - Sydney Morning Herald
Fourteen Rules for Advisors in Iraq - Small Wars Journal
A Solid State - Foreign Affairs
What Happened to Iraq? - The Atlantic
Visit to the Mosul Front Lines Briefing Note - Small Wars Journal
The Islamic State is Winning in Iraq - Wall Street Journal
Iraq’s security forces need US military support - Gulf News
Norman Ricklefs Interview on ABC TV, The Drum
NAMEA Group is proud to announce the appointment of Ambassador Luis Moreno to our board of advisors
Luis G. Moreno, a career member served as Ambassador to Jamaica from December 2014 to June 2017 when he retired from the Foreign Service. He is currently a member of the Foreign Service Grievance Board. Prior to Jamaica, Ambassador Moreno served as the Deputy Chief of Mission in Madrid, Spain. From 2010 to 2011, he served as the Political-Military Minister Counselor and Force Strategic Engagement Cell Director in Baghdad, Iraq. From 2007 to 2010, Ambassador Moreno served as the Deputy Chief of Mission in Tel Aviv, Israel. From 2004 to 2007, he was the Consul General and Principal Officer in Monterrey, Mexico. Ambassador Moreno served as the Deputy Chief of Mission in Port-au-Prince, Haiti from 2001 to 2004 From 1997-2001, Ambassador Moreno served as the Narcotics Affairs Director in Bogota, Colombia. He was instrumental in planning and implementing Plan Colombia.
In 1995, Ambassador Moreno was assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Panama as the Narcotics Director and Law Enforcement Coordinator. Shortly after his arrival he was detailed as the Kurdish Refugee Coordinator. He oversaw the U.S. government effort in moving Kurdish refugees to Guam and assisted them in their resettlement to the United States. In 1993, Ambassador Moreno was assigned to Port-au-Prince, Haiti as Refugee Coordinator. While in Haiti, he repatriated tens of thousands of Haitians, as well as directed three political asylum in-country processing centers. After the United Nations intervention in 1994, Ambassador Moreno became the Embassy’s first political-military officer. He was also the U.S. government’s primary advisor to the International Police Monitors.
Earlier in his career, Ambassador Moreno served as the Colombia Desk Officer for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement in Washington, DC; Deputy Director of the Narcotics Affairs Section in Lima, Peru; Staff Assistant in the Bureau of Latin American Affairs in Washington, DC; American Citizens Services Chief in Managua, Nicaragua; and Vice-Consul in Bogota, Colombia.
Ambassador Moreno has received 11 Senior Performance Awards, four Superior Honor Awards, three Meritorious Honor Awards, and the American Foreign Service Association William Rivkin Award for Creative Dissent. He won the Department of State’s James Clement Dunn Award for Excellence in Diplomacy in 2001. He received the Department of State’s Heroism Award in 2004. In 2012, he received a Presidential Meritorious Service Award for his achievements in 2010 as the Principal Officer in Monterrey, Mexico and the Deputy Chief of Mission in Tel Aviv, Israel. Ambassador Moreno received a B.A. from Fordham University and a M.A. from Kean College.
Ambassador Moreno speaks Spanish, French, and some Haitian Creole.
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