Generated by GPT-5-mini| Dan Senor | |
|---|---|
| Name | Dan Senor |
| Birth date | 1971 |
| Birth place | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
| Nationality | Canadian-American |
| Occupation | Writer; Commentator; Consultant |
| Alma mater | Yale University; New College, Oxford |
Dan Senor Dan Senor is a Canadian-American writer, political advisor, and consultant known for his work on Middle East policy, foreign relations, and economic development. He has been a staff member on political campaigns, an aide in diplomatic contexts, a commentator on broadcast media, and an author of books addressing international affairs and entrepreneurship. His roles have included government advisory positions, private-sector consultancy, and contributions to newspapers and television networks.
Senor was born in Toronto and raised in a Jewish family with roots in Montreal and Toronto. He attended Yale University, where he studied history and international relations and participated in campus political activities associated with Delta Kappa Epsilon. After Yale, he received a Rhodes Scholarship and studied at New College, Oxford, focusing on philosophy, politics, and economics and engaging with scholarly communities connected to St Antony's College-adjacent seminars and transatlantic policy networks.
Senor began his career in international affairs through internships and staff positions that connected him to prominent think tanks and policy institutes in Washington, D.C., including organizations that interact with the Council on Foreign Relations and the American Enterprise Institute. He later joined consulting and advisory firms that provide strategic counsel to corporations and sovereign clients, maintaining ties to business networks in New York City and Tel Aviv. Senor's professional activities have bridged political campaigning, public relations, and strategic communications, working with teams that include former officials from the United States Department of State and the United States Department of Defense.
Senor served as a foreign policy advisor on the 2008 presidential campaign of Mitt Romney and was associated with campaign networks linked to John McCain-era foreign policy circles and Condoleezza Rice-aligned practitioners. He worked as chief spokesperson for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq during the administration associated with Paul Bremer and participated in reconstruction initiatives following the 2003 invasion related to the Iraq War. His government service connected him to multilateral efforts involving the United Nations in Baghdad and to bilateral engagements with officials from Israel and other Middle Eastern states. In Washington, his advisory roles intersected with policy communities tied to the George W. Bush administration, the Heritage Foundation, and former national security officials.
Senor has been a regular commentator on cable and broadcast outlets such as Fox News, MSNBC, and CNBC, appearing alongside journalists associated with the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. He has written op-eds and columns for publications including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and The Washington Post, and contributed analyses to periodicals like Foreign Policy and The Atlantic. His media presence has included panel discussions with commentators from The Economist and interviews with anchors from Bloomberg Television and public affairs programs connected to PBS.
Senor is co-author, with Saul Singer, of "Start-Up Nation: The Story of Israel's Economic Miracle", a book that examines innovation clusters in Israel and references comparative cases in Silicon Valley, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Shenzhen. The book engages with economic and technological examples involving companies linked to Intel, Google, Microsoft, and Israeli firms traded on the NASDAQ. He has also authored essays and reports distributed through policy outlets associated with Brookings Institution-adjacent scholars and venture-focused analyses cited in works on entrepreneurship and innovation policy.
Senor's tenure with the Coalition Provisional Authority drew criticism from commentators associated with investigative reporting in outlets like The New Yorker and analysis by authors connected to material on the Iraq War. Critics from Human Rights Watch-adjacent advocacy networks and journalists linked to The Guardian and The Times scrutinized reconstruction policies and public statements from CPA spokespeople. His political affiliations and advisory roles on presidential campaigns prompted debate in op-eds by columnists at The Washington Post and The New York Times over partisanship and foreign policy judgment. Academic critics in journals such as International Security and contributors to Foreign Affairs questioned some of the analytic claims made in popular writings about innovation and statecraft.
Senor holds dual Canadian and American citizenship and has been associated with Jewish communal organizations in New York City and Jerusalem. He has served on advisory boards and corporate boards connected to venture capital firms in Silicon Valley and start-up accelerators with ties to Tel Aviv. His network includes figures from the Council on Foreign Relations, alumni associations of Yale University and the Rhodes Scholarship community, and policy circles around think tanks such as the Hudson Institute and the American Enterprise Institute.
Category:Canadian writers Category:American political consultants Category:Alumni of New College, Oxford Category:Yale University alumni