AAP Briefing The New Administration: Focus on Asia Pacific hosted by AMCHAM Myanmar
Date and Time
Friday Jan 31, 2025
8:00 AM - 9:00 AM ICT
Location
Zoom Webinar (Webinar link will be sent to you in advance)
Fees/Admission
AMCHAM and AAP Members: Free of Change Booking deadline: January 30, 12pm (Myanmar Time)
Capacity is limited and tickets are on a first-come-first-serve basis
Contact Information
AMCHAM Myanmar
Send Email
Description
Please be advised that this function is a partner event with an external organizer. The registration link will send you away from the AMCHAM website to the website of the organizer. Please be advised that this event organizer may have different data collection/privacy and event cancellation policies than AMCHAM Thailand.
REGISTER NOW
Please note that this event will be held on January 31 at 8.30am MMT (Myanmar), which are 8am in Bangkok Thailand (GMT+7), 11am KST/JST (Seoul & Tokyo), 3pm NZDT (Wellington) and on January 30 at 9pm EDT (Washington, DC).
Please join AMCHAM Myanmar and our colleagues in AmChams of the Asia Pacific (AAP) for an engaging briefing focused on the Asia-Pacific region!
The briefing will be with Patrick Costello and Peter Kucik from Mercury, a high-stakes public strategy firm. The guest speakers will discuss the incoming Trump Administration, specifically around trade policies, tariffs, and sanctions and what this might mean for the Asia Pacific region.
The session will be moderated by April Palmerlee, Chair of AAP and CEO of AmCham Australia.
The event is for AmCham members only. Pre-registration is required and all discussion is under Chatham House Rule, and off-the-record.
Registration deadline is on January 30, 2025 at 12:00 PM (Myanmar Time)
Capacity is limited and tickets are on a first-come-first-serve basis, no walk ins accepted
About Speakers:
Patrick Costello, Senior Vice President, Mercury (Washington DC). Costello is a recognized expert in U.S. foreign policy, trade policy, business diplomacy and the domestic politics of American foreign policy. Costello also regularly consults with the policymaking community and stakeholders on a wide range of foreign policy and economic issues, he is frequently sought out by individuals, institutions and companies to advise them on how to maximize their influence and impact in Washington, and writes a monthly column for the international business community in Italy.
Costello previously served as the Chief Executive Officer of the American Security Project (ASP), a non-partisan national security think tank in Washington, DC, where he provided day-to-day management of organizational strategy, internal policy formation, and stakeholder engagement and served as the public face of ASP to outside constituencies. Prior to joining ASP, Costello spent over a decade at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) in Washington where he held a number of senior roles and directed CFR's interactions with Washington policymakers and the diplomatic community, most recently as director of Washington External Affairs.
Upon coming to Washington, Costello worked in Congress for former Representative Jon Porter (R-NV) fulfilling a variety of policy and communications roles. After leaving Capitol Hill, Costello was a government relations counsellor with International Business-Government Counsellors where he directed congressional relations, and provided strategic advice and direct representation assisting businesses in international government relations activities affecting their global operations. Costello also served as a senior associate at The Whitaker Group, a consultancy and project development firm specializing in Africa.
Peter Kucik, Managing Director, Mercury (Washington DC). He is a trade and economic sanctions expert, providing clients with strategic advice and handling complex legislative, administrative, and regulatory matters before the federal government.
Peter worked for seven years at the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), where he was a Senior Sanctions Policy Advisor. During this time, he worked with the OFAC Director, the Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence (TFI), and other senior U.S. government officials to develop and implement sanctions policies and establish new regulatory schemes across OFAC programs. He supported all aspects of OFAC's work to craft new Executive Orders, sanctions regulations, license authorizations, and policy guidance in coordination with the National Security Council, Department of State, and Department of Commerce, and engaged with the Department of Homeland Security and Office of the United States Trade Representative. Peter played a key role in the implementation of U.S. sanctions policies for Libya and Myanmar, as well as President Obama's changes to ease restrictions on travel and remittances to Cuba.
Peter has assisted companies around the world to understand and navigate U.S. trade restrictions and sanctions, to fulfill international standards for transparency, anti-corruption and anti-money laundering, and labor rights, and to formulate effective corporate social responsibility programs. Peter also has extensive experience with the delisting process for individuals and entities that meet the standards for removal from the list of sanctioned Specially Designated Nationals (SDN List).
Peter has advised and briefed Congress on legislation and other sanctions matters, as well as engaged with foreign governments, international organizations, and the United Nations to provide information and technical advice regarding sanctions. He has appeared on CNBC's Squawk Box and CNN's World Business Today and is a go-to resource for The Wall Street Journal, Foreign Policy, Reuters, and Associated Press