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Jan 25, 2008
Former World Bank chief is head of US arms control panel
Former World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz whose leadership has been undermined by a furore over a hefty compensation packaged he arranged for a bank employee and his girlfriend will now head a US arms control panel. PHOTO: BT
WASHINGTON - The US State Department will name former World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz to head a high-level advisory panel on arms control and disarmament, The Associated Press has learned.

The move by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice marks a return to government for Mr Wolfowitz, a conservative with close ties to President George W Bush's White House.

Mr Wolfowitz was replaced as World Bank chief in June, after a stormy two-year tenure. His leadership was undermined by a furore over a hefty compensation package he arranged in 2005 for Shaha Riza, a bank employee and his girlfriend.

Mr Wolfowitz will become chairman of the International Security Advisory Board, which reports to the secretary of state. The panel's duty is to supply independent advice on arms control, disarmament, nonproliferation and related subjects to the secretary.

The portfolio includes commentary on several high-profile issues now before the administration, including pending nuclear deals with India and North Korea and an offer to negotiate with Iran over its disputed nuclear program.

Mr Wolfowitz currently is a defence and foreign policy studies scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative Washington think tank.

Mr Wolfowitz has a lengthy career in government, including service as deputy secretary of defense during Bush's presidency.

As the No. 2 official at the Pentagon, Mr Wolfowitz was a major architect of the Iraq war.

His stint at the development bank was marked by controversy from the start. Controversy over his companion's job arrangements put the bank's staff of 10,000 worldwide in revolt, tarnished the bank's reputation and strained relations with other countries, especially Europeans, who led the charge for Mr Wolfowitz's removal. -- AP

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