The Reliance Group chairman joins Rupert Murdoch, former Spanish PM Jose Maria Aznar and former Australian premier Kevin Rudd on the Council’s board.
Indian business magnet Anil Ambani has joined the international advisory board of The Atlantic Council, a Washington, DC, based think tank.
On the advisory board, the Reliance Group chairman joins other illustrious names such as News Corp Chairman Rupert Murdoch, former Spanish prime minister Jose Maria Aznar, Airbus CEO Thomas Enders and former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd.
Welcoming Ambani to the advisory board, former Utah governor and Chairman of the Atlantic Council, Jon M Huntsman, said in a press release, “The Atlantic Council’s presence in South Asia and in particular India is growing at a rapid pace and Anil’s presence on our board could not be more timely. We look forward to working with him to make a difference.”
Other notable members of the board include Dr Zbigniew K Brzezinski, former US national security advisor; PM Carl Bildt, former prime minister of Sweden; Lord Robertson, former secretary general of NATO.
The business leaders include Hakan Buskhe, President and CEO, SAAB; Stephen A Schwarzman, CEO of the Blackstone Group and Marillyn A Hewson, Chairman, Lockheed Martin Corporation.
Ambani, in a statement, said, “I am delighted to accept Jon’s invitation to join the advisory board of the Atlantic Council, which is undoubtedly America’s leading and most influential think-tank on global strategic affairs. This is a clear recognition by the Council of India’s growing geopolitical influence under Prime Minister Modi’s visionary and transformational leadership.”
The Atlantic Council is a foreign policy think-tank headquartered in Washington, DC.
Through the work of its 10 programs and centers, the Council promotes constructive US leadership and engagement in the world based on the central role of the Atlantic community, working with its allies and partners, to meet global challenges.
The Atlantic Council aims to shape policy choices and strategies and provide an essential forum for navigating the dramatic, economic and political changes that define the 21st century.
Among the 10 regional and thematic centers, the Atlantic Council’s South Asia Center manages sustainable and innovative programs that are focused on fostering development and cooperation in South Asia and its neighborhood.
Bharath Gopalaswamy, Director of South Asia Center, said, “We are eager to draw on his (Ambani’s) expertise as a business leader and service to the government of India, and he will be an invaluable addition to the Council as we look to deepen our programming on India, the subcontinent, and beyond.”
(This post has been updated.)