List of ambassadors of the United States to the United Nations
List of ambassadors of the United States to the United Nations
Ambassador of the United States of America to the United Nations | |
---|---|
United States Department of State | |
Style | Madam Ambassador (informal) Her Excellency (diplomatic) |
Member of | National Security Council Cabinet of the United States |
Reports to | President of the United States United States Secretary of State |
Seat | United Nations Headquarters New York City, New York, U.S. |
Appointer | President of the United States with Senate advice and consent |
Term length | No fixed term |
Formation | December 21, 1945 |
First holder | Edward Stettinius Jr. |
Salary | Executive Schedule, Level IV |
Website | usun |
The United States ambassador to the United Nations is the leader of the U.S. delegation, the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. The position is formally known as the permanent representative of the United States of America to the United Nations, with the rank and status of ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, and representative of the United States of America in the United Nations Security Council.
The deputy ambassador assumes the duties of the ambassador in his or her absence. As with all United States ambassadors, the ambassador to the UN and the deputy ambassador are nominated by the president of the United States and confirmed by the Senate. The ambassador serves at the pleasure of the president, and enjoys full diplomatic immunity.
The U.S. permanent representative is charged with representing the United States on the UN Security Council, and during all plenary meetings of the General Assembly, except when a more senior officer of the United States (such as the secretary of state or the president of the United States) is in attendance.
The current ambassador is Linda Thomas-Greenfield, who was nominated by President Joe Biden and confirmed by the Senate on February 23, 2021.
Cabinet status[edit]
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., a leading moderate Republican who lost his seat in the United States Senate to John F. Kennedy in the 1952 elections, was appointed ambassador to the United Nations in 1953 by Dwight D. Eisenhower in gratitude for the defeated senator's role in the new president's defeat of conservative leader Robert A. Taft for the 1952 Republican nomination and subsequent service as his campaign manager in the general election; Eisenhower raised the ambassadorship to Cabinet rank in order to give Lodge direct access to him without having to go through the State Department.[1]
The ambassadorship continued to hold this status through the Reagan administration but was removed from Cabinet rank by George H. W. Bush, who had previously held the position himself. It was restored under the Clinton administration. It was not a Cabinet-level position under the George W. Bush administration (from 2001 to 2009),[2][3] but was once again elevated under the Obama administration, and initially retained as such by the Trump administration.[4] However, in December 2018, it was reported by several news organizations that the Trump administration would once again downgrade the position to non-Cabinet rank.[5] The position was again elevated to Cabinet rank in the Biden administration.[6]
Former UN ambassador and national security advisor John R. Bolton has publicly opposed the granting of Cabinet-level status to the office, stating "One, it overstates the role and importance the U.N. should have in U.S. foreign policy, second, you shouldn't have two secretaries in the same department".
List of Ambassadors[edit]
Status
Denotes Acting United States Ambassador to the United Nations
Denotes United States Ambassador to the United Nations through Recess Appointment
The following is a chronological list of those who have held the office:
# | Portrait | Ambassador | Years Served | U.S. President | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Edward Stettinius Jr. | January 17, 1946 – June 3, 1946 | Harry S. Truman | ||
— | Herschel Johnson | June 3, 1946 – January 14, 1947 Acting | |||
2 | Warren Austin | January 14, 1947 – January 22, 1953 | |||
Dwight D. Eisenhower | |||||
3 | Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. | January 26, 1953[7] – September 3, 1960 | |||
4 | James Jeremiah Wadsworth | September 8, 1960 – January 21, 1961 | |||
John F. Kennedy | |||||
5 | Adlai Stevenson II | January 23, 1961 – July 14, 1965 | |||
Lyndon B. Johnson | |||||
6 | Arthur Goldberg | July 28, 1965 – June 24, 1968 | |||
7 | George Ball | June 26, 1968 – September 25, 1968 | |||
8 | James Russell Wiggins | October 7, 1968 – January 20, 1969 | |||
9 | Charles W. Yost | January 23, 1969 – February 25, 1971 | Richard Nixon | ||
10 | George H. W. Bush | March 1, 1971 – January 18, 1973 | |||
11 | John A. Scali | February 20, 1973 – June 29, 1975 | |||
Gerald Ford | |||||
12 | Daniel Patrick Moynihan | June 30, 1975 – February 2, 1976 | |||
13 | William Scranton | March 15, 1976 – January 19, 1977 | |||
14 | Andrew Young | January 30, 1977 – September 23, 1979 | Jimmy Carter | ||
15 | Donald McHenry | September 23, 1979 – January 20, 1981 | |||
16 | Jeane Kirkpatrick | February 4, 1981 – April 1, 1985 | Ronald Reagan | ||
17 | Vernon A. Walters | May 22, 1985 – March 15, 1989 | |||
George H. W. Bush | |||||
18 | Thomas R. Pickering | March 20, 1989 – May 7, 1992 | |||
19 | Edward J. Perkins | May 12, 1992 – January 27, 1993 | |||
Bill Clinton | |||||
20 | Madeleine Albright | January 27, 1993 – January 21, 1997 | |||
21 | Bill Richardson | February 18, 1997 – August 18, 1998 | |||
— | Peter Burleigh | August 18, 1998 – September 7, 1999 Acting | |||
22 | Richard Holbrooke | September 7, 1999 – January 20, 2001 | |||
— | James B. Cunningham | January 20, 2001 – September 19, 2001 Acting | George W. Bush | ||
23 | John Negroponte | September 19, 2001 – July 23, 2004 | |||
24 | John Danforth | July 23, 2004 – January 20, 2005 | |||
— | Anne W. Patterson | January 20, 2005 – August 2, 2005 Acting | |||
25 | John Bolton | August 2, 2005 – December 31, 2006 Recess appointment, not confirmed by the U.S. Senate | |||
— | Alejandro Daniel Wolff | December 31, 2006 – April 30, 2007 Acting | |||
26 | Zalmay Khalilzad | April 30, 2007 – January 22, 2009 | |||
Barack Obama | |||||
27 | Susan Rice | January 26, 2009 – June 30, 2013 | |||
— | Rosemary DiCarlo | June 30, 2013 – August 5, 2013 Acting | |||
28 | Samantha Power | August 5, 2013 – January 20, 2017 | |||
— | Michele J. Sison | January 20, 2017 – January 27, 2017 Acting | Donald Trump | ||
29 | Nikki Haley | January 27, 2017 – December 31, 2018 | |||
— | Jonathan Cohen | January 1, 2019 – September 12, 2019 Acting | |||
30 | Kelly Craft | September 12, 2019 – January 20, 2021 | |||
— | Richard M. Mills Jr. | January 20, 2021 – February 25, 2021 Acting | Joe Biden | ||
31 | Linda Thomas-Greenfield | February 25, 2021 – present |
List of Deputy Ambassadors[edit]
The United States Deputy Ambassador to the United Nations serves as the second most senior American diplomat before the United Nations General Assembly and the Security Council in New York and carries the diplomatic rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. In the absence of the Ambassador, the Deputy serves in his or her place.
This is an incomplete list of United States Deputy Ambassadors to the United Nations. At various times, this role has also been known as the Deputy Delegate to the United Nations, Deputy Representative to the United Nations, Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations, and chargé d'affaires of the U.S. Mission to the United Nations.
- Ernest A. Gross - October 11, 1949 – 1953
- James J. Wadsworth† February 28, 1953 – 1960
- Charles W. Yost† - February 13, 1961 – 1966
- William B. Buffum - January 1967 – 1970
- W. Tapley Bennett Jr. - 1971 – 1977
- James F. Leonard - 1977 – 1979
- Kenneth L. Adelman - confirmed July 29, 1981 – 1983
- José S. Sorzano - confirmed July 26, 1983 – 1985
- Herbert S. Okun - confirmed October 1, 1985 (following a recess appointment) – 1989
- Alexander F. Watson - confirmed August 4, 1989 – 1992
- Edward S. Walker Jr. - confirmed October 8, 1992 – 1993
- Skip Gnehm - April 1994 – August 1997
- A. Peter Burleigh - August 1997 – December 1999
- James B. Cunningham - December 12, 1999 – July 2004
- Anne W. Patterson - August 2004 – August 2005
- Alejandro Daniel Wolff - November 2005 – June 2010
- Rosemary DiCarlo - July 8, 2010 – c. November 1, 2014
- Michele J. Sison - December 7, 2014 – February 21, 2018
- Kelley Eckels Currie (acting) - February 21, 2018 – June 8, 2018
- Jonathan Cohen - June 8, 2018 – November 17, 2019
- Richard M. Mills Jr. - November 9, 2020 – present
†These Deputy Ambassadors later served as full U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations position (see above).
See also[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^ Hubbard, James P. (2011). The United States and the End of British Colonial Rule in Africa, 1941–1968. Jefferson City, NC: McFarland & Company. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-7864-5952-0.
- ^ Kelemen, Michele (December 1, 2008). "U.N. Envoy Nominee Rice Known As Smart, Tough". National Public Radio. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
The head of the United Nations Foundation, a Washington-based advocacy group, released a statement praising Rice as well as Obama's decision to make the post of U.N. ambassador a Cabinet-level position once again – as it was during the Clinton years.
- ^ Cooper, Helene (November 20, 2008). "Clinton Decision Holding Up Other Obama Choices". New York Times. Retrieved February 9, 2009.
Ms. Rice could get the post of United States ambassador to the United Nations, a cabinet-level position under President Clinton. President Bush downgraded the position when he came into office
- ^ Walker, Hunter. "President Trump announces his full Cabinet roster." Yahoo News. 2017-02-07. Retrieved 2017-02-08.
- ^ Kristen Welker; Geoff Bennett; Daniel Barnes (December 7, 2018). "U.N. ambassador to no longer be Cabinet-level position". NBC News. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
- ^ Kirby, Jen (November 23, 2020). "Biden announces veteran diplomat Linda Thomas-Greenfield as UN ambassador pick". Vox.
- ^ Chesly Manly (January 27, 1953). "Lodge Asks FBI to Screen All U.S. Aids [sic] on U.N." Chicago Tribune. Chicago Tribune Press Service.
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