Stephen Pomper Chief of Policy Washington, D.C. Please submit all media inquiries to spomper@crisisgroup.org and media@crisisgroup.org or call +1 (202) 785-1638 Crisis Group Role As Crisis Group's chief of policy, Stephen works with regional and cross-cutting programs to develop and promote the organisation’s analysis and prescriptions. He is based in Washington D.C. Professional Background Prior to joining Crisis Group, Stephen served as special assistant to the president and senior director for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights at the National Security Council under President Obama. Prior to joining the staff of the National Security Council, he served in a variety of roles with the Office of the Legal Adviser at the U.S. Department of State, where he specialised in domestic and international law regulating the use of force and the law of war, including as the assistant legal adviser for Political-Military Affairs. Outside government, Stephen has been a senior policy scholar at the U.S. Institute of Peace and a Leonard and Sophie Davis Genocide Prevention distinguished fellow at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, and was in private practice at Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton. He is a non-residential senior fellow at the NYU Law School Reiss Center on Law and Security. Stephen received his undergraduate degree from Harvard College and his law degree from Yale Law School. In The News 18 Aug 2021 One of the realities that has been realized [in the U.S.] in the past two decades is that advancing human rights policy through military intervention is extremely difficu... Washington Post Stephen Pomper Chief of Policy 17 Aug 2021 One of the realities that has been realized in the past two decades is that advancing human rights policy through military intervention is extremely difficult. Washington Post Stephen Pomper Chief of Policy 25 Feb 2020 [When the U.S. military] is out there laying down so-called ‘nonpersistent smart mines’ that will time out after 30 days, there’s still a field of mines out there. Christian Science Monitor Stephen Pomper Chief of Policy 15 Mar 2019 [On US visa restrictions against the ICC] the United States should be working to root out war criminals, not intimidate their prosecutors. Bloomberg Stephen Pomper Chief of Policy 4 Jan 2019 A relatively modest trade would help kickstart a more meaningful diplomatic process [between the U.S. and North Korea]. A verified shutdown of the Yongbyon nuclear facili... Washington Examiner Stephen Pomper Chief of Policy 7 Dec 2018 Bringing Heather Nauert aboard in a sub-Cabinet role will diminish the position [of US ambassador to the UN] yet further AP Stephen Pomper Chief of Policy Latest Updates Podcast / Asia 11 March 2023 Will the Ukraine War Blow U.S.-China Relations Further Off Course? Podcast / Global 15 January 2023 Ten Conflicts to Watch in 2023 Op-Ed / United States 02 December 2022 How to End Yemen’s Forever War U.S. Congressional Testimony / United States 10 February 2022 Targeted Killing and the Rule of Law: The Legal and Human Costs of 20 Years of U.S. Drone Strikes Podcast / United States 16 September 2021 License to Kill: Lawyering in the War on Terror Commentary / Middle East & North Africa 10 April 2019 Yemen Cannot Afford to Wait Also available in العربية Load more