Rodney W. Jones

Program Officer

Rodney Jones

Contact

Phone: (202) 429-3834

E-mail: rjones@usip.org

Languages: Urdu, Hindi, German, French

Current Projects: Conflict Prevention in Pakistan/South Asia | Pakistan Policy Working Group on AFPAK Security and Development Strategy | Nonproliferation and Nuclear Security | Mitigation of Militancy and Terrorism

Countries: Pakistan
Unpublished
 
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Rodney Jones joined USIP in March 2009 as Program Officer for Pakistan and South Asia and directs the Institute’s Pakistan/South Asia Program and the Pakistan Working Group. Prior to joining the Institute, Jones was President of Policy Architects International, a national security-consulting firm in Reston, Virginia. He served as a senior officer in the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency from 1989-1994, participated in the INF and START negotiations, and led the ACDA team in the JCIC in negotiating START I implementation. Prior to that he was Executive Director of the Washington Council on Non-Proliferation, and had served as Senior Fellow and Director of Nuclear Policy Projects at the Center for International and Strategic Studies (CSIS). Earlier he was an Associate Professor at Columbia University and the Institute of War and Peace Studies, and held a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellowship utilized as an officer in the US Department of State, Politico-Miitary Affairs Bureau. In that capacity, he had assignments on energy security, IAEA safeguards, nuclear and missile non-proliferation, and peacekeeping operations. Jones received his MA in International Relations and PhD in political science from Columbia University, and has done pre- and postdoctoral courses at University of Chicago and University of Michigan. He was born in India and has done field work for scholarly purposes both in India and Pakistan. He is a regular traveler to the region.

Publications:

Jones is the author or co-author of more than a dozen books and monographs, and of numerous chapters in other books, policy-oriented and scholarly articles, and op ed and media pieces or appearances. Recent publications include:

  • "Neutralizing Extremism and Insurgency in Afghanistan and Its Borderlands," in Afghanistan: Unabated Turmoil, Islamabad: Institute of Regional Studies, PanGraphics, Ltd., 2008, chp. 3.
  • "American boot, Pakistani Soil, Solution?," The Friday Times (Lahore), Sept. 12-18, 2008.
  • "Energy Security and Human Needs in South Asia," in Non-Traditional and Human Security in South Asia, Islamabad: Institute of Regional Studies, 2007.
  • "Prospects for Arms Control and Strategic Stability in South Asia," in Towards Strategic Stability in South Asia, a special issue of Contemporary South Asia, June 2005.
  • Escalation Control and the Nuclear Options in South Asia (with Michael Krepon and Ziad Haider), Washington, DC: Henry L. Stimson Center, 2004
  • The U.S. War on Terrorism: Religious Radicalism and Nuclear Confrontation in South Asia, Leicester University Center for the History of Religious and Political Pluralism, 2004; and "America’s War on Terrorism: Religious Radicalism and Nuclear Confrontation in South Asia," in Religious Radicalism and Security in South Asia, Honolulu: Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, 2004.

Resources & Tools

Map of Pakistan (Courtesy: CIA)
May 2009 | On the Issues by Rodney W. Jones

President Barack Obama recently met with Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari and Afghan President Hamid Karzai and pressed the two leaders to do more to combat Taliban and al Qaeda fighters in the border area.

Rodney W. Jones, program officer for USIP’s Center for Conflict Analysis and Prevention, assesses Pakistan’s efforts to battle insurgents, the Obama administration’s new approach on Pakistan and Afghanistan, and what USIP is doing to address the problems in the troubled region.

Events

SOURCE: Pervez Hoodbhoy
July 24, 2009

Dr. Hoodbhoy will assess the growth of extremist trends and related political changes in Pakistan, as well as discuss countervailing forces and the inherent resilience of Pakistani society. His analysis will draw out ways by which Pakistanis can help themselves, and the means by which US and Western assistance to Pakistan can help Pakistan stay on an even keel and help move it forward politically and economically.

Source: CIA World Factbook
July 22, 2009

Ambassador Lodhi has long been an expert on Pakistan’s security decisions and on Pakistan’s relations with the United States and the West and is well known in Washington, DC. Her presentation at USIP will review the internal political and security problems that challenge Pakistan from the spread of Taliban influence and extremism, and the impact on Pakistan and its relations with Afghanistan and other neighbors of US and NATO operations in Afghanistan.

July 20, 2009

The U.S. Institute of Peace and the International Center for Religion and Diplomacy are co-sponsoring a public event with a delegation from the Pakistan Council of Islamic Ideology.

Cover of Reconciliation in Afghanistan
July 10, 2009

What is the potential for political negotiations and reconciliation to resolve the armed conflict raging on both sides of the Durand Line that separates Afghanistan and Pakistan?

USIP's Jennings Randolph Senior Fellow Imtiaz Ali on his recent trip to Pakistan with Richard Holbrooke. (Photo: USIP)
June 11, 2009

At least 2.4 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) have now been registered from recent fighting in Swat, Buner and Dir areas. This is in addition to another 553,000 people registered as displaced in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), bringing the total number of displaced to 2.9 million since August 2008.