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Dimitri K. Simes (Russian: ; born October 29, 1947) Dimitri K. Simes is President and CEO of The Center for the National Interest and Publisher of its foreign policy bi-monthly magazine, The National Interest. Mr. Simes was selected to lead the Center in 1994 by former President Richard Nixon, to whom he served as an informal foreign policy advisor and with whom he traveled regularly to Russia and other former Soviet states as well as Western and Central Europe.
Mr. Simes served as Chairman of the Center for Russian and Eurasian Programs at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Simes was a Senior Research Fellow and subsequently the Director of Soviet Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Mr. Simes was born in Moscow in 1947, and both of his parents were prominent lawyers for dissidents in the Soviet Union and were expelled from the Soviet bar and forced to leave the country. Dimitri Simes graduated with an M.A. in history from Moscow State University. From 1967 to 1972, he was a research associate at the Institute of World Economy and International Affairs (a foreign policy think tank in the Soviet Union at that time) prior to emigrating to the U.S. in 1973.
Simes has served as a consultant to the National Intelligence Council. (Dimitri Simes, Wikipedia)
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The Center for the National Interest...
George Beebe is Director for Intelligence and National Security at the Center for the National Interest. He spent more than two decades in government service as an intelligence analyst, diplomat, and policy advisor, including service as director of CIAs Russia analysis (Center for the National Interest).
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace...
In 1993, The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace opened an affiliate in Moscow that advised Russian President Boris Eltsin in the process of privatization of the ex-Soviet economy through people like Yegor Gaidar, which earned it the nickname of Trojan Horse of the CIA... In 1997, Jessica T. Matthews (former director of Global Affairs at the National Security Council), was elected president of the Endowment... (The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Voltaire.net, Aug. 25, 2004).
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)...
CSIS was known for its hard-line Cold Warriors, and it is certain that many of the fellows or staff were former intelligence officials. Several of them made no secret about it. When president Carter installed Admiral Stansfield Turner as CIA director, many of the operatives who had been involved in the murky side of the CIA moved to CSIS. When Reagan reappointed Casey as director of the CIA in 1980s many of the CSIS fellow migrated back to the CIA or other intelligence agencies. (The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Wikispooks)
National Intelligence Council...
The National Intelligence Council supports the Director of National Intelligence inhis role as head of the Intelligence Community (IC) and isthe ICs center for long-term strategic analysis. ( Office of the Director of National Intelligence)
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