Genocide: Why Is It So Hard to Acknowledge?

Code: SL51814

Dates: November 19, 2021

Meets: 12:30 PM to 2:30 PM

Sessions: 1

Location: Creutzburg Center

Course Fee: $49.00

Sorry, we are no longer accepting registrations for this course. Please contact our office to find out if it will be rescheduled, or if alternative classes are available.

Genocide, the intentional destruction of a people, was coined in 1944, to describe the Nazi actions against Jews, Gypsies, and other ethnic and religious groups. Just as it took the world a long time to acknowledge these atrocities, it has continued to be difficult for people to acknowledge genocide. The delayed reaction to Rwanda and Cambodia are cases in point. Address the cost to nations of both denying and intervening in situations of genocide weighing the pros and cons of both points of view. Lunch is included.
Fee: $49.00
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Creutzburg Center

260 Gulph Creek Road
Radnor, PA 19087
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Charles Ray

Charles has over 50 years of experience in international affairs, with 20 years in the U.S. Army, and 30+ years in the U.S. Foreign Service. His military experience included assignments in Unconventional Warfare Planning, Psychological Operations, Intelligence and Public Affairs. During his Foreign Service career, he managed troubled organizations in Asia and Africa, and was instrumental in reestablishing a mil-to-mil relationship with Cambodia after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. As deputy chief of mission in Sierra Leone, he managed the military training program and oversaw USAID’s humanitarian assistance effort. He was also instrumental in brokering democratic elections in Sierra Leone, which saw a peaceful transfer of power from the military junta that had taken over the country the year before his assignment; this election took place during an externally-supported rebel war. He encouraged the government of Cambodia to take a more active role in combatting human trafficking, and implemented a successful Muslim outreach program in that country, which reversed the negative views the small Islamic community had about the United States. Charles served as deputy chief of mission in Sierra Leone, was the first post-war consul general in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, served as ambassador to Cambodia and Zimbabwe, and was appointed Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for POW/Missing Personnel Affairs and Director of the Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO), during which time, he oversaw development of the US government interagency policy on personnel recovery, working with the Department of State, FBI, DEA, and USAID to develop a comprehensive plan to provide proactive and reactive support to USG personnel working abroad. Since retiring from government service in 2012, Charles has consulted with DOD, participating in the development of a training continuum for Defense Attaches in support to chiefs of mission during personnel recovery operations, and provided training support to the US Army as an SME on interagency matters, preparing army units for deployment abroad in noncombat operations. He also conducted a workshop on professional writing for Rangel foreign affairs scholars at Howard University for 8 years. A prolific writer, Charles has published more than 300 books of fiction and nonfiction, including works on ethics, leadership, and diplomacy. He works with the Potomac Institute for Public Policy, developing a program on the use of diplomacy as a tool to combat terrorism and violent extremism. In 2020, he was asked by the Foreign Policy Research Institute to establish an Africa research program; in 2022 he was executive director of the American Diplomacy Project - Phase II, developing a blueprint for improving the American diplomatic service housed at Arizona State University (ASU); and since the spring of 2023 he has taught an online graduate course on Africa at ASU. Charles has a B.S. in business administration from Benedictine College, an M.S. in systems management from the University of Southern California, and an M.S. in national security management from the National War College of the National Defense University. He speaks Thai, Vietnamese, and Mandarin, and is a member of the American Academy of Diplomacy and the Association of Black American Ambassadors. Charles is chairman of the board of the Cold War Museum, at Vint Hill, VA, and chairs the board of advisors of the Institute of Science, Technology, and the Arts (ISSTA), an international boarding school, planned for construction in Orlando, Florida.

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