Shuja Nawaz
Shuja Nawaz, a native of Pakistan, was made the first director of the South Asia Center at The Atlantic Council in Washington, D.C. in January 2009.
He is a political and strategic analyst and writes for leading newspapers and websites, and speaks on current topics before civic groups, at think tanks, and on radio and television worldwide. He has worked with RAND, the United States Institute of Peace, The Center for Strategic and International Studies, The Atlantic Council, and other leading think tanks on projects dealing with Pakistan and the Middle East. He has also advised or briefed senior government and military officials and parliamentarians in the United States, Europe, and Pakistan.
Mr. Nawaz was educated at Gordon College, Rawalpindi, where he obtained a B.A. in economics and English literature, and the Graduate School of Journalism of Columbia University in New York. He was a newscaster and news and current affairs producer for Pakistan Television from 1967-72 and covered the 1971 war with India on the Western Front. He has worked for The New York Times, the World Health Organization, and has headed three separate divisions at the International Monetary Fund. He was also a director at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna from 1999-2001 while on leave from the IMF. Mr. Nawaz was the managing editor and then editor of Finance & Development, the multilingual quarterly of the IMF and the World Bank, and served on the Editorial Advisory Board of the World Bank Research Observer.
His latest book is Crossed Swords: Pakistan, its Army, and the Wars Within (Oxford University Press, 2008 and paperback 2009). He is also the author of FATA: A Most Dangerous Place (CSIS, January 2009) and Pakistan in the Danger Zone: A Tenuous US-Pakistan Relationship (Atlantic Council, 2010).
