Husain
Haqqani has taken over as Pakistan's Ambassador to the United States in Washington, DC. A trusted advisor of former Pakistani Prime Minsiter, Ms Benazir Bhutto, Ambassador Haqqani is known as a Professor
at Boston University and former Director of the Center for International Relations. He is also the Co-Chair of the Hudson Institute's Project
on the Future of the Muslim World as well as editor of the journal ‘Current
Trends in Islamist Thought' published from Washington DC.
Haqqani
came to the U.S. in 2002 as a Visiting Scholar at the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace in Washington DC and an adjunct Professor at
the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins
University. He is a leading journalist, diplomat, and former advisor
to Pakistani Prime ministers. His syndicated column is published
in several newspapers in South Asia and the Middle East, including Oman
Tribune, Jang, The Indian Express, Gulf News and The Nation (Pakistan).
Haqqani
started his journalism career with work as East Asian correspondent
for Arabia - The Islamic World Review and Pakistan and Afghanistan
correspondent for the Far Eastern Economic Review . During
this period he wrote extensively on Muslims in China and East Asia and
Islamic political movements. Covering the war in Afghanistan enabled
him to acquire deep understanding of the militant Jihadi groups.
Haqqani
has contributed to numerous international publications, including The
Wall Street Journal , The New York Times , International
Herald Tribune, Foreign Policy, The Los Angeles Times, The New Republic
and The Financial Times . He regularly comments on Pakistan,
Afghanistan, and Islamic politics and extremism on BBC, PBS, CNN, NBC,
Fox News and ABC.
Haqqani
also had a distinguished career in government. He served as an advisor
to Pakistani Prime ministers Ghulam Mustafa Jatoi, Nawaz Sharif, and
Benazir Bhutto. From 1992 to 1993 he was Pakistan's ambassador to Sri
Lanka.
Mr
Haqqani's 2005 book ‘Pakistan Between Mosque and Military' has been
praised in major international journals and newspapers as a path-breaking
book on Pakistan's political history. The book received favorable reviews
in Foreign Affairs , Wall Street Journal , Boston
Globe, and academic journals and has sold more copies than any other
book on Pakistan in the last decade.
Other
recent publications include Pakistan: Avoiding the Traps of the
Past (Policy brief, Carnegie Endowment, 2002); The Gospel of Jihad
(Foreign Policy magazine, September-October 2002); Islam's Medieval
Outposts (Foreign Policy, November-December 2002; The American Mongols
(Foreign Policy, May-June 2003); Islam's Weakened Moderates (Foreign
Policy, July-August 2003); Political Islam beyond the Middle East: Pakistan
and Afghanistan (in ‘Political Islam: Challenges for U.S. Policy', Aspen
Institute, July 2003), Think Again: The Causes of Islamist Terrorism
(Foreign Policy, January 2006).