Keen On America

Nobel Laureate Peter Agre: Why Scientists Must succeed Where Politicians Fail

Nov 2, 2025
Nobel Prize laureate Peter Agre, a physician known for his work in science diplomacy, discusses the crucial role of scientists in tackling issues where politicians falter. He highlights the successful role of scientists in brokering the 2015 Iran nuclear accord through scientific common ground. Agre critiques the political fallout from Trump’s cancellation of the deal and emphasizes the erosion of public trust in science during crises like COVID-19. He advocates for a problem-solving approach while warning about the impacts of skepticism on public health.
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INSIGHT

Scientists Should Translate Science For Policy

  • Politicians often lack scientific training, so scientists should make technical information accessible to improve policy decisions.
  • Scientists don't set policy but can provide clarity that helps leaders choose better options.
ANECDOTE

Scientists Brokered The Iran Deal

  • Peter Agre recounts how Iran and U.S. scientists Ernest Moniz and Ali Akbar Salehi brokered the 2015 nuclear accord by speaking a common technical language.
  • They even began talks by exchanging gifts for each other’s grandchildren, which built personal trust and broke political deadlock.
ANECDOTE

Cuba Shows Politics Blocking Cooperation

  • Agre uses U.S.-Cuba relations to show how political swings blocked scientific collaboration despite Cuban advances in medicine.
  • He notes moments of thaw under Clinton and Obama that enabled resumed scientific exchanges like the Yellow Fever Commission legacy.
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