FP Logo Your portal to global politics, economics, and ideas
FP Logo
Article Index
Search Site
FP Archive article
free registration required
back issue only
Home
Search Site
FP Archive
Article Index
FP e-Alert
Breaking Global News
Worldwide Links
Idea Feed
Country Intelligence
Free FP e-Alert
Submit Free FP e-Alert
More Info
Academic Program
Current Article

The article you requested is only available to FP subscribers. A short excerpt is provided here for your reference. Log on or purchase Archive access below to read the full story.

Letters: The Peace Corps Strikes Back
July/August 2008

I was greatly disappointed with both the tone and misrepresentations of Robert Strauss’s article (“Think Again: The Peace Corps,” ForeignPolicy.com, April 2008). It is ironic that Strauss is a former Peace Corps country director. Your readers should be aware that the responsibility to monitor the performance and effectiveness of volunteers fell directly into his hands.

As the current worldwide head of the Peace Corps, I can tell you that each of his arguments is false and with all certainty, our agency is thriving. In April, President Bush met with volunteers leaving for Guatemala and said the Peace Corps “really is the best foreign policy America could possibly have.”

Since 1961, more than 190,000 Americans have served in 139 countries. Today, applications are up—particularly from those older than 50—and we are at a 37-year high in the number of volunteers serving (more than 8,000 people in 74 countries). Last year, the Peace Corps created an office to gather data and better measure the impact of Peace Corps volunteers and found that they serve more than 2 million people each year.

As I visit our volunteers around the world, I see and hear how we continue to spread international goodwill. My wife and I served in the 1960s in rural India. Since then, the Peace Corps has changed with the times, but its strong impact continues around the world. Indeed, our dedicated, passionate volunteers represent America at its best and brightest, and their work is needed now more than ever. This article is an insult to every volunteer who has ever served in the Peace Corps.

—Ronald A. Tschetter
Director
Peace...



Read the Full Story!


Free and unlimited access is available to all active FP subscribers. Non-subscribers can gain instant access by subscribing to FP or by purchasing a 24-hour or 7-day pass.

If you are a current subscriber or an FP passholder, please log in here:

Username:

Password:
Remember my login information on this computer.

If you are a subscriber, but don't have login information, click here to register now.

Forgot your username or password? Enter your e-mail address below and we'll send you your login information.

E-mail:

Subscribe Now

Not a subscriber? SUBSCRIBE NOW for instant access to all FP content! You'll get 6 insightful issues of FP and complete archive access for $19.95!

Passes

Buy this article for $0.00 USD

Buy a 24-hour Pass for just $7.95 USD.

Buy a 7-day Pass for just $24.95 USD.


 

Shop at FP
Subscribe to FP
Login
Username
Password


| Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Contact Us | Site Map | Subscribe |

 
 
FP Logo
1899 L Street NW, Suite 550 | Washington, DC 20036 | Phone: 202-728-7300 | Fax: 202-728-7342
FOREIGN POLICY is published by the Slate Group, a division of Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC
All contents ©2009 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC. All rights reserved.
Site design by bevia.com; Programming by Enovational Design