Marshall Center Graduates First Afghan Participants
04-09 - July 27, 2004
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany— For the first time, the Marshall
Center will graduate participants from ten new countries outside of its European
and Eurasian region in a ceremony on July 30 at 11 a.m. The new countries are
part of the Program on Terrorism and Security Studies with participants from
Afghanistan, Egypt, India, Jordan, Malta, Morocco, Pakistan, Peru, Tunisia and
South Africa.
Admiral Rainer Feist, Deputy Supreme Allied Commander, Europe, will address
the Marshall Center’s graduation which also includes participants from the
Leaders of the 21st Century Program and Serbia and Montenegro Democracy Building
Program. There will be a total of 147 participants from 44 countries graduating.
The Program
on Terrorism and Security Studies was designed to help integrate
the counter-terrorism community and enable individual nations to successfully
cooperate in the on-going global war on terrorism. Participants included current
and future national security officials working in counter-terrorist programs.
The goal of the program was to help them appreciate both the nature and
magnitude of today’s threat, and to improve their ability to counter terrorism’s
regional implications by providing common grounds of knowledge, understanding
and contacts.
Media are invited to cover the graduation remarks of Adm. Feist. The ceremony
begins at 11 a.m. on Friday, July 30. Media should arrive not later than 10:45
a.m. For more information and access onto Sheridan Kaserne, please contact Laura
DeFrancisco at 08821-750-648, mobile 0160-908-13761 or email defranciscol@marshallcenter.org.
or Michael Meyer at 08821-750-795 or meyerm@marshallcenter.org.
The Marshall Center is a renowned U.S. Department of Defense and German
Ministry of Defense educational institution. More than 3,200 military and
civilian officials from 51 nations have graduated from resident courses and over
12,300 have attended nearly 200
conferences discussing European and Central Asian security issues
since the center was dedicated in 1993.