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As global powers double down on militarism and defense, Daniel Zoughbie argues that the most transformative force in the Middle East has always come from citizen diplomacy.
A complex-systems scientist and diplomatic historian, Zoughbie joins Mark Labberton to explore how twelve US presidents have "kicked the hornet's nest" of the modern Middle East. Drawing on his work in global health and his new book Kicking the Hornet's Nest: U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East from Truman to Trump, Zoughbie contrasts the view from refugee camps and micro-clinic networks with the view from the Oval Office, arguing that American security rests on a three-legged stool of defence, diplomacy, and development.
He explains why Gerald Ford stands out as the lone president who truly leveraged diplomacy, how the Marshall Plan model of enlightened self-interest can guide policy now, and why nationalism, not mere economics, lies at the heart of Gaza's future. Throughout, he presses listeners toward "citizen diplomacy" that resists pride, militarism, and fatalism.
Episode Highlights
Helpful Links and Resources
About Daniel Zoughbie
Daniel E. Zoughbie is a complex-systems scientist, historian, and expert on presidential decision-making. He is associate project scientist at UC Berkeley's Institute of International Studies, a faculty affiliate of the UCSF/UCB Center for Global Health Delivery, Diplomacy, and Economics, and principal investigator of the Middle East and North Africa Diplomacy, Development, and Defense Initiative. He is the author of Kicking the Hornet's Nest: U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East from Truman to Trump and of Indecision Points: George W. Bush and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. His award-winning research has appeared in journals such as PLOS Medicine, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, and Social Science and Medicine. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of UC Berkeley, he studied at Oxford on a Marshall Scholarship and completed his doctorate there as a Weidenfeld Scholar.
Show Notes
Middle East Background and Micro-clinic Origins
Social Networks, Anthropology, and Security
Complex Systems and Foreign Policy
From Refugee Camps to Presidential Palaces
Twelve Presidents and One Exception
Gerald Ford, Kissinger, and the Path to Peace
Pride, Personality, and Presidential Failure
Marshall Plan and Enlightened Self-Interest
Militarism, Iran, and Nuclear Risk
Ethical Realism and Max Weber
Gaza, Nationalism, and Two States
Citizen Diplomacy and a Better Way
Production Credits
Conversing is produced and distributed in partnership with Comment magazine and Fuller Seminary.
By Comment + Fuller Seminary4.8
137137 ratings
As global powers double down on militarism and defense, Daniel Zoughbie argues that the most transformative force in the Middle East has always come from citizen diplomacy.
A complex-systems scientist and diplomatic historian, Zoughbie joins Mark Labberton to explore how twelve US presidents have "kicked the hornet's nest" of the modern Middle East. Drawing on his work in global health and his new book Kicking the Hornet's Nest: U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East from Truman to Trump, Zoughbie contrasts the view from refugee camps and micro-clinic networks with the view from the Oval Office, arguing that American security rests on a three-legged stool of defence, diplomacy, and development.
He explains why Gerald Ford stands out as the lone president who truly leveraged diplomacy, how the Marshall Plan model of enlightened self-interest can guide policy now, and why nationalism, not mere economics, lies at the heart of Gaza's future. Throughout, he presses listeners toward "citizen diplomacy" that resists pride, militarism, and fatalism.
Episode Highlights
Helpful Links and Resources
About Daniel Zoughbie
Daniel E. Zoughbie is a complex-systems scientist, historian, and expert on presidential decision-making. He is associate project scientist at UC Berkeley's Institute of International Studies, a faculty affiliate of the UCSF/UCB Center for Global Health Delivery, Diplomacy, and Economics, and principal investigator of the Middle East and North Africa Diplomacy, Development, and Defense Initiative. He is the author of Kicking the Hornet's Nest: U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East from Truman to Trump and of Indecision Points: George W. Bush and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. His award-winning research has appeared in journals such as PLOS Medicine, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, and Social Science and Medicine. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of UC Berkeley, he studied at Oxford on a Marshall Scholarship and completed his doctorate there as a Weidenfeld Scholar.
Show Notes
Middle East Background and Micro-clinic Origins
Social Networks, Anthropology, and Security
Complex Systems and Foreign Policy
From Refugee Camps to Presidential Palaces
Twelve Presidents and One Exception
Gerald Ford, Kissinger, and the Path to Peace
Pride, Personality, and Presidential Failure
Marshall Plan and Enlightened Self-Interest
Militarism, Iran, and Nuclear Risk
Ethical Realism and Max Weber
Gaza, Nationalism, and Two States
Citizen Diplomacy and a Better Way
Production Credits
Conversing is produced and distributed in partnership with Comment magazine and Fuller Seminary.

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