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This article contains several lists of Ambassadors from the United States. There are also individual articles listing the holders of many of the ambassadorial offices, for which see Category:Lists of United States ambassadors.
The incumbents change from time to time; sometimes a post starts or stops being temporarily headed by a lower ranking diplomat. Occasionally, a post is created or abolished.
[edit] Current U.S. Ambassadors
Host country (common names) |
Ref |
U.S. Ambassador |
Embassy
Website |
Afghanistan |
Ref |
William B. Wood |
Kabul |
Albania |
|
John L. Withers, II |
Tirana |
Algeria |
Ref |
Robert Stephen Ford |
Algiers |
Andorra[1] |
Ref |
Eduardo Aguirre |
Barcelona |
Angola |
Ref |
Dan Mozena |
Luanda |
Antigua and Barbuda[2] |
Ref |
Mary M. Ourisman |
Bridgetown |
Argentina |
Ref |
Earl A. Wayne |
Buenos Aires |
Armenia |
Ref |
Vacant
Joseph Pennington – Chargé d’Affaires |
Yerevan |
Australia |
Ref |
Robert McCallum, Jr. |
Canberra |
Austria |
|
Vacant
David Girard-diCarlo (nominated) |
Vienna |
Azerbaijan |
Ref |
Anne E. Derse |
Baku |
The Bahamas |
Ref |
Ned L. Siegel |
Nassau |
Bahrain |
Ref |
J. Adam Ereli |
Manama |
Bangladesh |
|
James F. Moriarty |
Dhaka |
Barbados[2] |
Ref |
Mary M. Ourisman |
Bridgetown |
Belarus |
|
Karen B. Stewart |
Minsk |
Belgium |
|
Sam Fox |
Brussels |
Belize |
|
Robert J. Dieter |
Belize |
Benin |
Ref |
Gayleatha B. Brown |
Cotonou |
Bhutan[3] |
|
|
— |
Bolivia |
Ref |
Philip S. Goldberg |
La Paz |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
|
Charles L. English |
Sarajevo |
Botswana |
Ref |
Katherine H. Canavan |
Gaborone |
Brazil |
Ref |
Clifford M. Sobel |
Brasilia |
Brunei |
|
Emil Skodon |
Bandar Seri Begawan |
Bulgaria |
|
Nancy E. McEldowney |
Sofia |
Burkina Faso |
|
Jeanine Jackson |
Ouagadougou |
Burma[4][5] |
|
Vacant
Sharon E. Villarosa – Chargé d’Affaires |
Rangoon |
Burundi |
Ref |
Patricia N. Moller |
Bujumbura |
Cambodia |
|
Joseph A. Mussomeli |
Phnom Penh |
Cameroon |
|
Janet E. Garvey |
Yaoundé |
Canada |
Ref |
David Wilkins |
Ottawa |
Cape Verde |
Ref |
Roger D. Pierce |
Praia |
Central African Republic[6] |
|
Vacant
A. James Panos – Chargé d’Affaires |
— |
Chad |
|
Marc M. Wall |
Ndjamena |
Chile |
Ref |
Paul E. Simons |
Santiago |
China |
Ref |
Clark T. Randt, Jr. |
Beijing |
Colombia |
Ref |
William Brownfield |
Bogotá |
Comoros[7] |
|
James D. McGee |
Antananarivo |
Democratic Republic of the Congo |
Ref |
William J. Garvelink[8] |
Kinshasa |
Republic of the Congo[9] |
Ref |
Robert Weisberg |
|
Costa Rica |
|
Peter Cianchette |
San José |
Côte d'Ivoire |
|
Wanda L. Nesbitt |
Abidjan |
Croatia |
|
Robert A. Bradtke |
Zagreb |
Cuba[10] |
Ref
Ref |
Michael E. Parmly
Chief of Mission |
Havana |
Cyprus |
|
Ronald Lewis Schlicher |
Nicosia |
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus[11] |
|
|
|
Czech Republic |
Ref |
Richard W. Graber |
Prague |
Denmark |
Ref |
James P. Cain |
Copenhagen |
Djibouti |
Ref |
W. Stuart Symington |
Djibouti |
Dominica[2] |
Ref |
Mary M. Ourisman |
Bridgetown |
Dominican Republic |
Ref |
P. Robert Fannin |
Santo Domingo |
East Timor |
|
Vacant |
Dili |
Ecuador |
Ref |
Heather M. Hodges |
Quito |
Egypt |
|
Francis J. Ricciardone, Jr. |
Cairo |
El Salvador |
Ref |
Charles L. Glazer |
San Salvador |
Equatorial Guinea |
Ref |
Donald C. Johnson |
Malabo |
Eritrea |
|
Scott H. DeLisi |
Asmara |
Estonia |
|
Stanley Davis Phillips |
Tallinn |
Ethiopia |
Ref |
Donald Yamamoto |
Addis Ababa |
Fiji[12] |
|
Larry M. Dinger |
Suva |
Finland |
|
Barbara McConnell Barrett |
Finland |
France |
Ref |
Craig Roberts Stapleton |
Paris |
Gabon[13] |
Ref |
R. Barrie Walkley |
Libreville |
The Gambia |
|
Joseph D. Stafford III |
Banjul |
Georgia |
|
John F. Tefft |
Tbilisi |
Germany |
Ref |
William R. Timken, Jr. |
Berlin |
Ghana |
|
Pamela Bridgewater |
Accra |
Greece |
|
Daniel V. Speckhard |
Athens |
Grenada[2] |
|
Mary M. Ourisman |
Bridgetown |
Guatemala |
|
James M. Derham |
Guatemala |
Guinea |
|
Jackson McDonald |
Conakry |
Guinea-Bissau[14] |
|
Janice L. Jacobs |
Dakar |
Guyana |
Ref |
David M. Robinson |
Georgetown |
Haiti |
Ref |
Janet A. Sanderson |
Port-au-Prince |
Holy See |
Ref |
Mary Ann Glendon |
Vatican |
Honduras |
Ref |
Charles A. Ford |
Tegucigalpa |
Hungary |
|
April H. Foley |
Budapest |
Iceland |
Ref |
Carol van Voorst |
Reykjavik |
India |
Ref |
David C. Mulford |
New Delhi |
Indonesia |
|
Cameron R. Hume |
Jakarta |
Iran[15] |
Ref |
|
— |
Iraq |
Ref |
Ryan Crocker |
Baghdad |
Ireland |
Ref |
Thomas C. Foley |
Dublin |
Israel |
Ref |
Richard H. Jones |
Tel Aviv |
Italy[16] |
Ref |
Ronald P. Spogli |
Rome |
Jamaica |
Ref |
Brenda LaGrange Johnson |
Kingston |
Japan |
Ref |
John Thomas Schieffer |
Tokyo |
Jordan |
|
David Hale |
Amman |
Kazakhstan |
|
John M. Ordway |
Astana |
Kenya |
Ref |
Michael E. Ranneberger |
Nairobi |
Kiribati[12] |
|
Larry M. Dinger |
Suva |
North Korea[17] |
|
|
— |
South Korea |
|
Alexander Vershbow |
Seoul |
Kosovo |
Ref |
Vacant
Tina S. Kaidanow – Chargé d’Affaires a.i. |
Pristina |
Kuwait |
Ref |
Richard LeBaron |
Kuwait |
Kyrgyzstan |
|
Marie L. Yovanovitch |
Bishkek |
Laos |
|
Ravic R. Huso |
Vientiane |
Latvia |
|
Catherine Todd Bailey |
Riga |
Lebanon |
Ref |
Jeffrey D. Feltman |
Beirut |
Lesotho |
Ref |
Robert B. Nolan |
Maseru |
Liberia |
|
Donald E. Booth |
Monrovia |
Libya[18][19] |
|
Vacant
Charles O. Cecil – Chargé d’Affaires a.i. |
Tripoli |
Liechtenstein[20] |
|
Peter R. Coneway |
Bern |
Lithuania |
|
John A. Cloud |
Vilnius |
Luxembourg |
|
Ann Wagner |
Luxembourg |
Macedonia |
|
Gillian A. Milovanovic |
Skopje |
Madagascar[7] |
|
James D. McGee |
Antananarivo |
Malawi |
Ref |
Alan Eastham |
Lilongwe |
Malaysia |
|
James Keith |
Kuala Lumpur |
Maldives[21] |
|
Robert O. Blake, Jr. |
Colombo |
Mali |
|
Terence P. McCulley |
Bamako |
Malta |
|
Molly Bordonaro |
Valletta |
Marshall Islands |
|
Clyde Bishop |
Majuro |
Mauritania |
|
Vacant |
Nouakchott |
Mauritius[22] |
|
Cesar Cabrera |
Port Louis |
Mexico |
Ref |
Antonio O. Garza Jr. |
Mexico City |
Micronesia |
|
Miriam K. Hughes |
Kolonia |
Moldova |
|
Michael D. Kirby |
Chisinau |
Monaco[23] |
|
|
Marseille |
Mongolia |
|
Mark C. Minton |
Ulaanbaatar |
Montenegro |
|
Roderick W. Moore |
Podgorica |
Morocco |
Ref |
Thomas T. Riley |
Rabat |
Mozambique |
Ref |
Vacant
Elizabeth Raspolic – Charge d’Affaires a.i. |
Maputo |
Myanmar (see Burma above)[4] |
|
|
|
Namibia |
Ref |
Joyce Anne Barr |
Windhoek |
Nauru[12] |
|
Larry M. Dinger |
Suva |
Nepal |
|
Nancy Jo Powel |
Kathmandu |
Netherlands |
Ref |
Vacant |
The Hague |
New Zealand[24] |
Ref |
William P. McCormick |
Wellington |
Nicaragua |
|
Paul A. Trivelli |
Managua |
Niger |
|
Bernadette M. Allen |
Niamey |
Nigeria |
|
Robin R. Sanders |
Abuja |
Norway |
Ref |
Benson K. Whitney |
Oslo |
Oman |
|
Gary A. Grappo |
Muscat |
Pakistan |
Ref |
Anne W. Patterson |
Islamabad |
Palau[25] |
|
Kristie A. Kenney |
Manila |
Panama |
Ref |
Barbara J. Stephenson |
Panama |
Papua New Guinea[26] |
|
Leslie V. Rowe |
Port Moresby |
Paraguay |
Ref |
James Cason |
Asunción |
Peru |
Ref |
P. Michael McKinley |
Lima |
Philippines[25] |
Ref |
Kristie A. Kenney |
Manila |
Poland |
|
Victor Ashe |
Warsaw |
Portugal |
|
Alfred Hoffman, Jr. |
Lisbon |
Qatar |
Ref |
Chase Untermeyer |
Doha |
Romania |
Ref |
Nicholas F. Taubman |
Bucharest |
Russia |
Ref |
William Joseph Burns |
Moscow |
Rwanda |
Ref |
Michael R. Arietti |
Kigali |
Saint Kitts and Nevis[2] |
Ref |
Mary M. Ourisman |
Bridgetown |
Saint Lucia[2] |
Ref |
Mary M. Ourisman |
Bridgetown |
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines[2] |
Ref |
Mary M. Ourisman |
Bridgetown |
Samoa[24] |
|
William P. McCormick
George W. Colvin, Jr. – Chargé in Apia |
Wellington |
San Marino[16] |
|
|
Florence |
São Tomé and Príncipe[13] |
Ref |
Eunice Reddick |
Libreville |
Saudi Arabia |
Ref |
Ford M. Fraker |
Riyadh |
Senegal[14] |
|
Janice L. Jacobs |
Dakar |
Serbia |
|
Cameron Munter |
Belgrade |
Seychelles[22] |
|
Cesar Cabrera |
Port Louis |
Sierra Leone |
|
June Carter Perry |
Freetown |
Singapore |
|
Patricia L. Herbold |
Singapore |
Slovakia |
Ref |
Vincent Obsitnik |
Bratislava |
Slovenia |
|
Thomas B. Robertson |
Ljubljana |
Solomon Islands[26] |
|
Leslie V. Rowe |
Honiara |
Somalia[27] |
Ref |
— |
— |
South Africa |
Ref |
Eric M. Bost |
Pretoria |
Spain[1] |
Ref |
Eduardo Aguirre |
Madrid |
Sri Lanka[21] |
|
Robert O. Blake, Jr. |
Colombo |
Sudan[28] |
|
Vacant
Cameron R. Hume – Chargé d’Affaires |
Khartoum |
Suriname |
Ref |
Lisa Bobbie Schreiber Hughes |
Paramaribo |
Swaziland |
Ref |
Maurice S. Parker |
Mbabane |
Sweden |
Ref |
Michael M. Wood |
Stockholm |
Switzerland[20] |
|
Peter R. Coneway |
Bern |
Syria[29] |
|
Vacant
Steve Seche – Chargé d’Affaires |
Damascus |
Tajikistan |
|
Tracey Ann Jacobson |
Dushanbe |
Tanzania |
Ref |
Mark Green |
Dar es Salaam |
Thailand |
|
Eric G. John |
Bangkok |
Togo |
Ref |
David B. Dunn |
Lomé |
Tonga[12] |
|
Larry M. Dinger |
Tonga |
Trinidad and Tobago |
Ref |
Dr. Roy L. Austin |
Port of Spain |
Tunisia |
|
Robert F. Godec |
Tunis |
Turkey |
|
Ross Wilson |
Ankara |
Turkmenistan[30] |
|
Vacant
Richard E. Hoagland – Chargé d’Affaires a.i. |
Ashgabat |
Tuvalu[12] |
|
Larry M. Dinger |
Suva |
Uganda |
|
Steven A. Browning |
Kampala |
Ukraine |
|
William B. Taylor, Jr. |
Kiev |
United Arab Emirates |
Ref |
Michele J. Sison |
Abu Dhabi |
United Kingdom[31] |
Ref |
Robert Tuttle |
London |
Uruguay |
Ref |
Frank E. Baxter |
Montevideo |
Uzbekistan |
|
Richard Norland |
Tashkent |
Vanuatu[26] |
|
Leslie V. Rowe |
Port Vila |
Venezuela |
Ref |
Patrick Duddy |
Caracas |
Vietnam |
Ref |
Michael W. Michalak |
Hanoi |
Western Sahara[32] |
|
|
— |
Yemen |
Ref |
Stephen A. Seche |
Sana’a |
Zambia |
Ref |
Carmen M. Martinez |
Lusaka |
Zimbabwe |
Ref |
Christopher W. Dell |
Harare |
- ^ a b The U.S. Ambassador to Spain—resident in Madrid—is also accredited to Andorra.
- ^ a b c d e f g One ambassador, accredited to Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, is resident at Bridgetown, Barbados.
- ^ The United States does not currently maintain diplomatic relations with Bhutan.
- ^ a b In 1989 the military government of Burma changed the name of the nation to Myanmar, but the United States government—and other Western governments—do not accept the name and still refer to the country as Burma in official usage. See Myanmar.
- ^ The US has not had an ambassador to Burma since 1990.
- ^ The United States has had no ambassador in Bangui since 2002. The embassy is currently operating with a chargé d’affaires and a minimal staff. Source: U.S. Department of State, U.S. Department of State, CIA World Factbook
- ^ a b One ambassador—resident in Antananarivo—is accredited to Madagascar and Comoros.
- ^ Embassy Website
- ^ At the present time, the U.S. Embassy in Brazzaville has no website. Source U.S. Department of State.
- ^ The United States does not currently maintain diplomatic relations with Cuba. U.S. interests in Cuba are handled by the U.S. Interests section of the Embassy of Switzerland in Havana.
- ^ The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus is not recognized by the United Nations, the United States, nor any other country aside from Turkey.
- ^ a b c d e One ambassador—resident at Suva—is accredited to Fiji, Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, and Tuvalu. Source U.S. Embassy Suva.
- ^ a b One ambassador—resident in Libreville—is accredited to Gabon and São Tomé and Príncipe. Source: U.S. State Department
- ^ a b One ambassador—resident at Dakar—is accredited to Guinea-Bissau and Senegal.
- ^ The United States does not currently maintain diplomatic relations Iran. U.S. interests in Iran are handled by the U.S. Interests section of the Embassy of Switzerland in Tehran.
- ^ a b The U.S. Ambassador to Rome is also accredited to San Marino. The U.S. Embassy in Florence handles matters concerned with San Marino.
- ^ The United States does not currently maintain diplomatic relations with North Korea. American citizens who travel to North Korea do so at their own risk and in some cases in violation of U.S. and/or UN sanctions.
- ^ Ambassador Joseph Palmer II ended his mission in Libya on November 7, 1972. A series of Chargés d’Affaires maintained the embassy until 1980. Chargé William L. Eagleton was recalled on February 8, 1980, and the Tripoli embassy was closed on May 2, 1980. Source: U.S. State Department.
- ^ The United States established an Interests Section in Tripoli on February 8, 2004. It became the U.S. Liaison Office on June 28, 2004, with Greg Berry as the Principal Officer. The Liaison Office was upgraded to a full embassy on May 31, 2006, with Charles O. Cecil as chargé d’affaires. As of December 2006, no ambassador has yet been appointed. Source: U.S. State Department, U.S. State Department.
- ^ a b One ambassador—resident in Berne—is accredited to Switzerland and Liechtenstein.
- ^ a b One ambassador—resident at Colombo—is accredited to Maldives and Sri Lanka.
- ^ a b One ambassador is accredited to Mauritius and Seychelles—resident in Port Louis, Mauritius.
- ^ The United States has no formal diplomatic relations (exchange of ambassadors) with Monaco. The U.S. Consul General in Marseille, France, under the authority of the U.S. Ambassador to France, is formally accredited to Monaco. Source: Department of State: Background notes on Monaco, U.S. consulate in Marseille.
- ^ a b One ambassador—resident in Wellington— is accredited to New Zealand and Samoa.
- ^ a b One ambassador—resident in Manila—is accredited to the Philippines and Palau. Source: CIA World Factbook.
- ^ a b c One ambassador—resident in Port Moresby—is accredited to Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu.
- ^ The United States has no diplomatic relations with Somalia. The last ambassador to Somalia was James Keough Bishop when the embassy in Mogadishu was closed on January 5, 1991. Source: U.S State Department.
- ^ The U.S. Embassy in Khartoum was closed on February 7, 1996. Timothy Michael Carney was the last ambassador to Sudan. The embassy was reopened on May 23, 2002, with Jeffrey Millington as Chargé d’Affaires ad interim. There has been no U.S. ambassador in Khartoum since then. Source U.S. Department of State.
- ^ Ambassador Margaret Scobey was recalled February 2005 in protest of Rafik Hariri assassination. Ref: U.S. Department of State press release, Background notes on Syria, BBC News.
- ^ The previous ambassador to Turkmenistan, Tracey Ann Jacobson is now commissioned to Tajikistan. A new ambassador to Turkmenistan has not yet been appointed. Source: United States Embassy in Ashgabat.
- ^ The ambassador to the U.K. is known as the “Ambassador to the Court of St. James’s.”
- ^ The United States does not recognize Western Sahara, nor does the US recognize Moroccan claims to sovereignty over Western Sahara. Sources: Western Sahara, Foreign relations of Western Sahara, Foreign relations of Morocco.
[edit] Ambassadors to international organizations
Current ambassadors from the United States to international organizations
Host organization |
Location |
Ambassador |
African Union |
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia |
Cindy Courville |
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation |
Washington, D.C., United States |
Patricia Haslach |
Conference on Disarmament |
Geneva, Switzerland |
Jackie Wolcott Sanders |
European Union |
Brussels, Belgium |
C. Boyden Gray |
International Civil Aviation Organization |
Montreal, Canada |
Edward W. Stimpson |
North Atlantic Treaty Organization |
Brussels, Belgium |
Victoria Nuland |
Organization of American States |
Washington, D.C., United States |
John Maisto |
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development |
Paris, France |
Constance A. Morella |
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe |
Vienna, Austria |
Julie Finley |
United Nations |
New York, United States |
Zalmay Khalilzad |
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization |
Paris, France |
Louise V. Oliver |
United Nations Environment Programme |
Nairobi, Kenya |
Johnnie Carson |
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization |
Rome, Italy |
Tony P. Hall |
United Nations International Organizations in Vienna |
Vienna, Austria |
Gregory Schulte |
[edit] Ambassadors-at-large
Current ambassadors-at-large from the United States with worldwide responsibility:
[edit] Ambassadors to past countries
[edit] Other senior diplomatic representatives
Other senior diplomatic representatives from the United States
[edit] Selected past ambassadors
Well-known past ambassadors from the United States
Ambassador |
Host country or organization |
Charles Francis Adams |
United Kingdom |
James W. Spain |
Tanzania, Turkey, Sri Lanka, UN |
John Adams |
United Kingdom, Netherlands |
John Quincy Adams |
United Kingdom, Russia, Netherlands, Germany |
Madeleine K. Albright |
United Nations |
Eugenie Anderson |
Denmark |
Walter H. Annenberg |
United Kingdom |
William Waldorf Astor |
Italy |
Alfred Atherton |
Egypt |
Warren R. Austin |
UN |
Ebenezer Bassett |
Haiti |
Lucius D. Battle |
Egypt |
Shirley Temple Black |
Czechoslovakia, Ghana, United Nations |
Barbara Bodine |
Yemen |
Corrinne Claiborne "Lindy" Boggs |
Holy See |
L. Paul Bremer |
Netherlands |
Carol Moseley Braun |
New Zealand |
James Buchanan |
Russia, United Kingdom |
Ellsworth Bunker |
South Vietnam |
George H. W. Bush |
United Nations |
William Walton Butterworth |
Sweden, Canada, European Union |
Lewis Cass Sr. |
France |
Richard F. Celeste |
India |
Daniel R. Coats |
Germany |
George M. Dallas |
United Kingdom, Russia |
Monnett Bain Davis |
Panama Israel |
John W. Davis |
United Kingdom |
Charles G. Dawes |
United Kingdom |
Frederick Douglass |
Haiti |
Adolph Dubs |
Afghanistan |
Lawrence Eagleburger |
Yugoslavia |
John Eisenhower |
Belgium |
Millicent Fenwick |
United Nations |
Raymond Flynn |
Holy See |
Thomas S. Foley |
Japan |
Benjamin Franklin |
France, Sweden |
Frederick T. Frelinghuysen |
United Kingdom |
John Kenneth Galbraith |
India |
April Glaspie |
Iraq |
Arthur Goldberg |
United Nations |
Michael E. Guest |
Romania |
Hannibal Hamlin |
Spain |
W. Averell Harriman |
Soviet Union, United Kingdom |
Pamela Harriman |
France |
Patricia Roberts Harris |
Luxembourg |
John Hay |
United Kingdom |
Richard Holbrooke |
United Nations, Germany |
James Hormel |
Luxembourg |
John Jay |
Spain |
Thomas Jefferson |
France |
George Kennan |
Yugoslavia |
Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. |
United Kingdom |
Alan Keyes |
United Nations Social and Economic Council |
Rufus King |
United Kingdom |
Jeane Kirkpatrick |
United Nations |
Richard F. Kneip |
Singapore |
Robert Todd Lincoln |
United Kingdom |
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. |
United Nations, Germany |
Winston Lord |
China |
Clare Boothe Luce |
Italy |
Douglas MacArthur II |
Japan, Iran, Austria and Belgium |
Michael J. Mansfield |
Japan |
Graham Martin |
South Vietnam |
Jack F. Matlock, Jr. |
Czechoslovakia and Soviet Union |
George S. McGovern |
United Nations agencies in Rome |
Andrew W. Mellon |
United Kingdom |
Perle Mesta |
Luxembourg |
Walter F. Mondale |
Japan |
James Monroe |
France, United Kingdom |
Gouverneur Morris |
France |
Dwight W. Morrow |
Mexico |
John H. Morrow |
Guinea, UNESCO |
Daniel Patrick Moynihan |
United Nations |
John Negroponte |
Honduras, Iraq, Mexico, Philippines, United Nations |
Walter Hines Page |
United Kingdom |
Pete Peterson |
Vietnam |
Charles C. Pinckney |
France, Spain |
Thomas Pinckney |
United Kingdom |
William Pinkney |
United Kingdom, Russia |
Laurence Pope |
Chad |
John Randolph |
Russia |
Whitelaw Reid |
United Kingdom, France |
Elliot L. Richardson |
United Kingdom |
Carl Rowan |
Finland |
Donald Rumsfeld |
NATO |
Richard Rush |
United Kingdom |
James R. Sasser |
China |
William B. Saxbe |
India |
Talcott Seelye |
Tunisia, Syria |
R. Sargent Shriver |
France |
Jean Kennedy Smith |
Ireland |
Raymond A. Spruance |
Philippines |
Adlai E. Stevenson II |
United Nations |
William Sullivan |
Laos, Philippines, Iran |
Alphonso Taft |
Austria, Russia |
William Howard Taft III |
Ireland |
Martin Van Buren |
United Kingdom |
Edward S. Walker, Jr. |
United Arab Emirates, United Nations, Egypt, Israel |
Richard L. Walker |
South Korea |
Paul Wolfowitz |
Indonesia |
Andrew Young |
United Nations |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links