You were recently chosen as a potential candidate to represent your professional community in the 2015 Edition of Who's Who. The premier networking organization for distinguished professionals.
Warm_Regards,
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You were recently chosen as a potential candidate to represent your professional community in the 2015 Edition of Who's Who. The premier networking organization for distinguished professionals.
Warm_Regards,
|
e142a5025528fe2a16898d9e1ebbb015 White House, they have given the war a face and voice in West Wing, serving as a constant reminder that, for a small percentage of Americans, the long, divisive conflict has also been a matter of life and death."It's a bit of a gut check on everything you say and do about the policy of the war and the politics of it," said Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser for strategic communication.The end of the nearly nine-year war marked a promise fulfilled for Obama, who took office pledging to end the conflict. Mindful of the politics of war, some of the veterans who now work for Obama are careful not to draw a direct connection between the president's positions on the Iraq war and their decision to work for his administration.Still, Steve Miska, Obama's director of Iraq policy, said he had "an overwhelming sense of relief" when the president announced that the war was coming to a close. An Army lieutenant colonel and father of two, Miska did three tours of
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