VIRTUAL TOUR
SFS Profiles: Our Faculty
Robert L. Gallucci, Dean
Robert L. Gallucci
Robert L. Gallucci began as Dean of Georgetown University's Edmund
A. Walsh School of Foreign Service on May 1, 1996. He had just
completed twenty-one years of government service, serving since
August 1994 with the Department of State as Ambassador at Large.
In March 1998, the Department of State announced his appointment
as Special Envoy to deal with the threat posed by the proliferation
of ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction. He held
this position, concurrent with his appointment as Dean, until
January 2001.
Dr. Gallucci began his foreign affairs career at the Arms Control
and Disarmament Agency in 1974. In 1978, he became a division
chief in the Department of State's Bureau of Intelligence and
Research. From 1979 to 1981, he was a member of the Secretary's
Policy Planning Staff. He then served as an office director in
both the Bureau of Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs (1982-83)
and in the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs (1983-84). In
1984, he left Washington to serve as the Deputy Director General
of the Multinational Force and Observers, the Sinai peacekeeping
force headquartered in Rome, Italy. Returning in 1988, he joined
the faculty of the National War College where he taught until
1991. In April of that year he moved to United Nations Headquarters
in New York to take up an appointment as the Deputy Executive
Chairman of the UN Special Commission (UNSCOM) overseeing the
disarmament of Iraq. He returned to Washington in February 1992
to be the Senior Coordinator responsible for nonproliferation
and nuclear safety initiatives in the former Soviet Union in the
Office of the Deputy Secretary. In July 1992, Dr. Gallucci was
confirmed as the Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military
Affairs.
Dr. Gallucci was born in Brooklyn on February 11, 1946. He earned
a bachelor's degree from the State University of New York at Stony
Brook, followed by a master's and doctorate in Politics from Brandeis
University. Before joining the State Department, he taught at
Swarthmore College, Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International
Studies and Georgetown University. He has received fellowships
from the Council on Foreign Relations, the International Institute
for Strategic Studies, Harvard University, and the Brookings Institution.
He has authored a number of publications on political-military
issues, including Neither Peace Nor Honor: The Politics of American
Military Policy in Vietnam (Johns Hopkins University Press 1975),
and Going Critical: The First North Korean Nuclear Crisis with
Joel S. Wit and Daniel Poneman (Brookings Press, April 2004).
He received the Department of the Army's Outstanding Civilian
Service Award in 1991, the Pi Sigma Alpha Award from the National
Capital Area Political Science Association in 2000, and the Doctor
of Humane Letters (honorary) from the State University of New
York at Stony Brook in May 2002. He is married to Jennifer Sims;
they have a daughter and a son.