Government In 1976, Bailey was the first
social scientist ever hired by
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and was a founding member of the
proliferation intelligence analysis program, which she directed from 1978 to 1981. She specialized in analyses of foreign nuclear weapons programs. She undertook a controversial effort (ultimately squelched) to publicize a conclusion she had reached during her research in Tehran: that Iran was ripe for revolution and that it was likely to be led by the Islamic clergy. In 1981, she resigned from LLNL and founded a consultancy, International Ventures Consultants, which provided political and economic analyses on Africa to multinational companies. She produced a bi-weekly publication,
Insight Africa, from 1981 to 1983. In 1983, she accepted a political appointment from the Reagan Administration as deputy director for the Bureau for Research in the
United States Information Agency, with responsibilities for foreign public opinion polling and analysis. She was acting director from late-1983 to 1985. She initiated a program to highlight key reporting from leading foreign newspapers. From 1985 to 1987, she served as deputy assistant secretary in the
Bureau of Intelligence and Research in the U.S. Department of State, where she headed the Office of Disinformation, Analysis, and Response, was responsible for long-range assessments, was INR liaison with the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, and chaired the Interagency Active Measures Working Group. In the latter capacity, she revived the moribund group and edited/co-authored
Active Measures: A Report on the Substance and Process of Anti-US Disinformation and Propaganda Campaigns, (US Department of State, 1986), and
Soviet Influence Activities: A Report on Active Measures and Propaganda, 1986-87, (US Department of State, 1987), the latter of which revealed the Soviet role behind the accusation that the US was responsible for creating the AIDS virus as a weapon. In 1987, she was confirmed by the
United States Senate as assistant director of the
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, responsible for nuclear, chemical, biological, and missile nonproliferation policies. She initiated efforts to expand arms control dialog with China, including a bilateral meeting held in Beijing. She led the U.S. delegation to Preparatory Committee meetings for the 1990 Review Conference for the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. She tried unsuccessfully internationalize the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty, and to undertake initiatives to address Iran's budding nuclear weapons program. Following the election of President
George H. W. Bush, she left the Arms Control Agency. In 1990, she taught international relations for a semester at
George Mason University, where she wrote
Doomsday Weapons in the Hands of Many (University of Illinois Press, 1991). Thereafter, she became a senior analyst at the National Institute for Public Policy, where she headed two major projects: one to assess the verifiability of the
Chemical Weapons Convention; the other, to examine the implications of U.S. nuclear forces moving from a triad to a dyad. In 1992, she left
Washington, D.C. to return to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to serve on the director's staff and was founding editor of the
Director’s Series on Proliferation. She regularly testified before the
United States Congress on arms control issues, including the Chemical Weapons Convention and the
Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty. She was a guest lecturer at the
NATO Defense College as well as at universities throughout the United States. In 1997, Bailey spoke publicly against ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. C. Bruce Tarter, then LLNL Director, ordered her to refrain from all public discussion of that treaty and other policy issues. Citing freedom of expression guidelines of the
University of California (LLNL's institutional oversight body), she testified on her views before Congress and, at the request of Senator
Jon Kyl (AZ), briefed several senators on the problems with the CTBT. Following retaliation measures against her at the Laboratory, Bailey retired from LLNL in 1999. She served on Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice’s Arms Control and Nonproliferation Advisory Board (2006–2008).
Art Beginning in 1999, Bailey became a full-time artist, a profession for which she goes by her middle name, Cordelia. Although she is an oil-on-canvas painter, she is best known for her fine-art photography, which has been exhibited in galleries throughout the United States and is held in private collections. She authored and produced a feature-length film,
Revenge in Kind, released in 2017.
2022 congressional election In August 2021, Bailey announced her candidacy for
Texas's 5th congressional district in the 2022 election. Bailey is a member of the
Democratic Party. ==Personal life==