Debra Cagan

Cagan (third from left) at a meeting between Robert Gates and Stephen Smith, Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs
Cagan (third from left) with Gates (left)

Debra L. Cagan (born March, 1954) is an American stateswoman and a former U.S. foreign policy liaison. Her most notable public role was that of an adviser to former United States president George W. Bush.

Career

Government positions

Controversies

According to the Daily Mail newspaper, visiting British MPs claimed that during a meeting she stated that "I hate all Iranians." She then purportedly accused Britain of "dismantling" the Anglo-US-led coalition in Iraq by pulling troops out of Basra too soon.[7]

Advocacy

An advocate of increased westernisation in ex-Soviet states, Cagan met Georgian Defence Minister David Kezerashvili on 18 July 2007 to discuss bilateral cooperation. Cagan was one of the first to establish the Georgia Train and Equip Program (GTEP), which has allegedly improved the process of development in Georgia’s professional army. She has also visited and conversed with Albanian[8] and Macedonian[9] officials, on behalf of the United States. Cagan toured Eastern European and central Asian countries seeking increased troop provisions in Iraq, to bolster the image of a coalition.[10]

References

External links

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