词条 | L. Desaix Anderson |
释义 |
Mr. Anderson, a 35-year veteran of the U.S. Foreign Service, spent most of his career working on Asian issues. He was the first envoy to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, following establishment of diplomatic relations, serving as chargé d'affaires from August 1995 when the embassy opened until 1997. Mr. Anderson was born in 1936, and was raised on a farm in rural Mississippi. He received his B.A. in History from Princeton University, and did graduate work in European Literature at the University of California at Berkeley. He also served on active duty as an officer in the U.S. Navy from 1958 to 1960, after which he managed his family farm in Mississippi.[1] He entered the Foreign Service in 1962. His first assignment was in Kathmandu, Nepal, as General Services Officer (1963-64). Mr. Anderson was assigned to Vietnam as an A.I.D. provincial representative and later as an advisor to the revolutionary development programs in Vietnam. Following his assignment to the Vietnam Working Group in the State Department (1965-67), he was assigned as a political officer to the U.S. Embassy in Taipei (1970-73), and afterward to the U.S. Embassy Tokyo (1973-76). After a stint in the Political-Military Bureau, he was assigned as deputy political counselor and chief Indochina watcher in the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand (1977-80). He then was named Country Director for Vietnam, Laos, and Kampuchea in the Department of State (1980-83) and subsequently Country Director for Japan (1983-85). He then served as Deputy Chief of Mission in Tokyo under Ambassador Mike Mansfield (1985-89). He was Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific, covering Japan, Korea, China, and Mongolia (1989-92). He was also assigned as a diplomat-in-residence at Princeton and Rutgers Universities, where he lectured and wrote on East Asian political economies (1992-93). He served as the State Department Coordinator for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) ministerial and leaders meetings hosted by President Clinton in Seattle, Washington (1993-94). He subsequently was a Senior Member for Asia of the Policy Planning Council (1994-95). Following his service as chargé in Hanoi, Mr. Anderson left the Foreign Service in May 1997. He served as State Department Special Envoy on Cambodia on August 1997. He taught on Contemporary Asian Political Economies at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University during the spring semester of 1998. President Bill Clinton appointed Desaix Anderson was appointed as the Executive Director of the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization (KEDO) from 1997 to 2001. Mr. Anderson has contributed to such publications as "U.S. and Japan: Challenges and Opportunities?" in SAIS Review, summer-fall 1993/volume 13, number 2 and "APEC Focus: Accomplishment and Challenge?" in Pacific Rim Law Review and Policy Journal, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, spring review, 1995. The primary historical significance of Anderson's contribution was his instrumental role in restoring formal diplomatic relations between the United States and Vietnam. His most notable assignment was opening the first U.S. Embassy in Hanoi after the Vietnam War, in August 1995. He faced many challenges, however, Vietnam and the US were finally able to restore diplomatic relations. Before embarking on his mission, Anderson gained insight by meeting with senators John McCain, John Kerry, Bob Kerrey, Thad Cochran, Chuck Robb, Frank Murkowski, Kit Bond, Craig Thomas, and Jay Rockefeller.{{citation needed|date=April 2008}} Anderson is currently an Executive Board member of the Maureen and Mike Mansfield Foundation which is composed of former US Ambassadors to Japan. Mr. Anderson speaks fluent English, French, Japanese, Chinese, Vietnamese, Thai with a working knowledge of Lao, Khmer and Korean. {{s-start}}{{succession box |title=Chargé d'Affaires ad interim to Vietnam |before= first incumbent |after=Pete Peterson|years=1995–1997}}{{s-end}}References1. ^Desaix Anderson Biographic Sketch Institute for Corean-American Studies, retrieved 2008-04-22 2. ^An American in Hanoi External links
7 : Living people|1936 births|Princeton University alumni|University of California, Berkeley alumni|Ambassadors of the United States to Vietnam|United States–Vietnam relations|United States Foreign Service personnel |
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