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Robert Malley secures teaching gig at Princeton University

The suspended Iran envoy, under investigation for mishandling classified information, is to teach a graduate-level course in foreign-policy decision-making.

Robert Malley
U.S. Special Envoy for Iran Robert Malley. Credit: VOA Persian/Wikimedia Commons.

Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs announced on Tuesday that Robert Malley will be coming aboard in the fall as a visiting professor and lecturer. Malley will teach a foreign-policy graduate course on decision-making, as well as two undergraduate courses in the spring on diplomacy, negotiation and foreign policy, according to Princeton.

The notice states merely that Malley is “currently on leave from his role as a special envoy for Iran in the State Department,” without noting that the former diplomat is reportedly under investigation for mishandling classified information.

If the university knows anything specific about the investigation, let alone that Malley has been cleared, it would know more than the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which the U.S. State Department has kept in the dark. If it does not know details, Princeton is hiring someone to teach about decision-making, without knowing the gravity of the decisions that got that person suspended.

“Pitiful. Look who my alma mater just made a professor,” wrote Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). “Rob Malley was such a pro-Iran radical that he was fired from the Biden administration and had his security clearance stripped for ‘mishandling classified documents’ (the details are still hidden).”

The university has come under fire recently for a course that includes a book accusing Israel of harvesting Palestinian organs as one of its assigned readings.

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