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Michael
B. Oren is the State of Israel's Ambassador to the
United States.
A graduate of Princeton and Columbia, Dr. Oren has
received fellowships from the U.S. Departments of
State and Defense, and from the British and Canadian
governments. Formerly, he was the
Lady Davis Fellow of Hebrew
University, a Moshe Dayan Fellow at Tel-Aviv University,
and the Distinguished Fellow at the Shalem Center
in Jerusalem. He has been a visiting professor at
Harvard, Yale, and Georgetown.
Ambassador Oren has written extensively for The Wall
Street Journal, The New York Times, and The New Republic,
where he was a contributing editor. His two most recent
books, Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of
the Modern Middle East and Power, Faith, and Fantasy:
America in the Middle East, 1776 to the Present, were
both New York Times bestsellers. They won the Los
Angeles Times' History Book of the Year prize, a National
Council of the Humanities Award, and the National
Jewish Book Award.
Raised in New Jersey, where he was an activist in
Zionist youth movements and a gold medal winning athlete
in the Maccabia Games, Ambassador Oren moved to Israel
in the 1970s. He served as an officer in the Israel
Defense Forces, in the paratroopers in the Lebanon
War, a liaison with the U.S. Sixth Fleet during the
Gulf War, and an IDF spokesman during the Second Lebanon
War and the Gaza operation in January 2009. He acted
as an Israeli Emissary to Jewish refuseniks in the
Soviet Union, as an advisor to Israel's delegation
to the United Nations, and as the government's director
of Inter-Religious Affairs. He has testified before
Congress and briefed the White House on Middle Eastern
affairs.
Ambassador Oren
is married to Sally, and they have three children-Yoav,
Lia, and Noam.
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