Our Next President
Introducing Carnegie’s New President
Message from Board of Trustees Chair Jane Hartley
I am delighted to announce that the Board of Trustees has selected Avril Haines as the eleventh president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Avril brings an extraordinary record of public service and a deep commitment to the principles that have guided Carnegie for more than a century. Confirmed with broad bipartisan support, Avril served as the seventh Director of National Intelligence under President Biden. She also previously served in top national security roles, including as principal deputy national security advisor in the Obama White House, deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and deputy chief counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Across decades of service spanning all three branches of government as well as academia, she built a reputation for intellectual honesty and a deep belief that decisions made at the highest levels of power must never lose sight of the people they affect.
Avril currently holds appointments at Columbia University and Oxford University, where she is a fellow at All Souls College pursuing research on the ethical culture of decisionmaking in national security—work that is in line with Carnegie’s mission.
Avril will assume the role on September 28. The trustees and I are thrilled to welcome Avril to Carnegie and look forward to her vision taking shape in the months and years ahead.
More on Avril Haines
Avril Haines will be the eleventh president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, effective September 28.
Confirmed with overwhelming bipartisan support, Avril served as the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) and a cabinet member during the Biden administration, where she led the U.S. intelligence community and served as the president’s principal intelligence adviser. She has held senior roles across government, including as an assistant to the president and principal deputy national security advisor, during which she chaired the Deputies Committee, the administration’s primary forum for crafting national security and foreign policy. She also served as deputy director of the CIA, legal adviser to the National Security Council, assistant legal adviser for treaty affairs, and deputy chief counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee—giving her experience in intelligence, policy, and legal positions over the course of both Democratic and Republican administrations in all three branches of the U.S. government. Avril received a law degree from Georgetown University Law Center, served as a law clerk for Judge Danny Boggs on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, and spent a year as a legal officer at the Hague Conference on Private International Law. Prior to law school, Avril received her bachelor’s degree in physics from the University of Chicago. She founded and then ran a bookstore cafe in Baltimore for five years.
While outside of government over the years, Avril worked in academia as a senior research scholar at Columbia University and a senior fellow at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. She was also appointed by the president in 2017 to be a Member of the National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service and has served on a number of boards and advisory groups. Following her recent service in the Biden administration, Avril was a visiting fellow at All Souls College in Oxford, a Carnegie distinguished fellow at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, a senior fellow at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, and a member of the Atlantic Council’s International Advisory Board.
Avril has been the recipient of numerous awards for her leadership and government service, including the NATO Parliamentary Assembly’s Women for Peace and Security Award, the Atlantic Council’s International Distinguished Leadership Award, the Business Executives for National Security’s Eisenhower Award, and the Washington International Business Council Award. U.S. allies have also recognized Avril’s work. In particular, she has received the Australian Intelligence Medal, the King’s Royal Norwegian Order of Merit, the Republic of Korea’s Order of Merit, Estonia’s Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana, and the Romanian Medal of Honor.
World Economic Forum, source: Sandra Blaser
LBJ Library photo, source: Laura Skelding