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Washington Report on Middle East Affairs

Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs
WashingtonreportcoverJan-Feb2002.jpg
January/February 2002 issue
Executive Editor Delinda C. Hanley
Categories Arab–Israeli conflict, Israeli–Palestinian conflict
Frequency 8 times a year
Circulation 40,000
Publisher Andrew I. Killgore
First issue 1982
Company American Educational Trust
Country United States
Based in Washington, D.C.
Language English
Website http://www.wrmea.org/
ISSN 8755-4917

The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (also known as The Washington Report and WRMEA) magazine, published eight times per year, focuses on "news and analysis from and about the Middle East and U.S. policy in that region".The New York Times has characterized it as "critical of United States policies in the Middle East". In 2005, USA Today called it "a non-partisan publication that has been critical of Bush's policies". Representatives of pro-Israel organizations have criticized the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs as being aligned with the Arab lobby and as "anti-Israel".

The Washington Report is published by the American Educational Trust (AET), founded in 1982 as a non-profit foundation incorporated in Washington, D.C. under 501(c)4 by retired U.S. foreign service officers including Andrew Killgore, who was U.S. Ambassador to Qatar when he retired from the United States Foreign Service in 1980 and Richard Curtiss, a former head of the Arabic Service of the Voice of America, who was chief inspector of the U.S. Information Agency when he retired from the United States Foreign Service in 1980. Killgore is the publisher and Curtiss was the Executive Editor until his death in 2013. Delinda C. Hanley, Curtiss's daughter, is the current editor.

AET's Foreign Policy Committee has included former U.S. ambassadors, government officials, and members of the United States Congress, including the late Democratic Senator J. William Fulbright and Republican Senator Charles Percy, both former chairmen of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Members of its Board of Directors and advisory committees "receive no fees for their services".


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