Jump to content

Jonathan Addleton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nahcamuk (talk | contribs) at 13:27, 11 November 2013. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Jonathan S. Addleton
8th United States Ambassador to Mongolia
In office
November 25, 2009 – August 1, 2012
Preceded byMark C. Minton
Succeeded byPiper Campbell

Jonathan Addleton is an American author and diplomat. He served as the 8th U.S. Ambassador to Mongolia from 2009 to 2012.

Addleton was born in 1957 in Pakistan, the son of Baptist missionaries from rural Georgia. He spent his early years with his parents in Upper Sind then attended the Murree Christian School, located at an old British Himalayan hill station near the tiny crossroads town of Jhika Gali in the Murree hills of Rawalpindi District, Punjab province. [1]

Vice President Joseph Biden talks with US Ambassador Jonathan Addleton at Ulaanbaatar's Chinggis Khan Airport, Aug. 2011

He went on to attend college at Northwestern University, where he received his bachelor’s in journalism. He later earned his MA and PhD from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. As an undergraduate he was an intern and then a reporter at The Macon Telegraph. He worked briefly at the World Bank and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, before joining the Foreign Service in 1984. His first assignments were as USAID Program Officer in Jordan, Kazakhstan, South Africa, and Yemen.[2]

From 2001-2004 Addleton as USAID mission director in Mongolia. He then headed the USAID missions in Cambodia (2004-2006) and Pakistan (2006-2007). Addleton was Counselor for International Development at the US Mission to the European Union in Brussels, Belgium, when President Barack Obama nominated him to be ambassador to Mongolia.[3]

His publishing credits include a memoir of his childhood in Pakistan, Some Far and Distant Place, Undermining the Centre: The Gulf Migration and Pakistan, and Mongolia and the United States: A Diplomatic History. He has also contributed articles to Asian Survey, Asian Affairs, Muslim World, Foreign Service Journal and The Washington Post.

He speaks Urdu and Hindi.


Diplomatic posts
Preceded by U.S. Ambassador to Mongolia
2009 - 2012
Succeeded by

References

  1. ^ Murree Christian School
  2. ^ AllGov. "Ambassador to Mongolia: Who is Jonathan Addleton?". Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  3. ^ U.S. White House. "President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts". Retrieved 5 December 2012.

Template:Persondata