Timothy Naftali
Senior Research Scholar in the Faculty of International and Public Affairs
Personal Details
Dr. Timothy Naftali, formerly a clinical professor of public service at NYU’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, clinical professor of history in NYU’s College of Arts and Science, and director of NYU’s undergraduate public policy program, joined Columbia in July 2023 as a Senior Research Scholar at SIPA. Naftali, whose book Khrushchev’s Cold War with Aleksandr Fursenko, won the Royal United Services Institute’s Duke of Westminster’s medal for military literature in 2007, is a pioneer in the study of modern international and espionage history and is a well-recognized presidential historian. After serving as the first director of the Miller Center of Public Affairs’ presidential recordings program. Naftali became the founding director of the federal Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in 2007, where he curated a nationally recognized nonpartisan permanent exhibit on Watergate and oversaw the release of 1.3 million pages of records. Naftali is the author, co-author or editor of 8 books, including a biography of George Herbert Walker Bush and histories of US counterterrorism policy and of presidential impeachment. Naftali was an historical consultant to both the Nazi party War Crimes and Imperial Japanese Government Records Interagency Working Group and to the 9/11 Commission. He is currently a member of the State Department’s Historical Advisory Committee, which provides oversight for the Foreign Relations of the United States series. Naftali, who is a CNN presidential historian, has appeared in several documentaries, most recently Prime Video’s “The Devil’s Confession: The Lost Eichmann Tapes” and CNN’s “2010s,” and has also consulted on CNN’s “Tricky Dick” and Netflix’s “Designated Survivor.”
In The Media
After a shocking shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday, presidential historian Timothy Naftali discusses what this suggests about American politics and society.
On the Trump administration's assertion that preserving presidential records is unconstitutional, senior research scholar Tim Naftali remarked, "This is about whether we can hold our most powerful leader accountable. And I don't know how you hold them accountable if they can destroy the record of their actions in government."
“I don’t think this president is really that enamored of being self-deprecating. This would be an opportunity for him to ask Dennis Miller to write material for him, but I think he will ask Stephen Miller instead,” said senior research scholar Tim Naftali on the White House Correspondents' dinner.
"His attack on the Presidential Records Act is an attempt at post facto vindication for having taken public property to Mar-a-Lago," said Timothy Naftali, the former director of the Nixon Presidential Library.
Trump’s threat — that a “whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again” — nearly six weeks into a war that he started, was of a different order and shouldn’t be dismissed as just a “Trump-being-Trump moment,” Timothy Naftali, a presidential historian at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs, told The Atlantic. “That’s a no-go zone.”