Anthony C. E. Quainton

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Anthony C. E. Quainton

Anthony Cecil Eden Quainton (born April 4, 1934) is a former United States diplomat.

He was born in Seattle and educated at St. Michaels University School in Victoria, Canada; at Princeton University, where he received a B.A. in 1955; and Oxford University, England, as a Marshall Scholar, where he received a B.Litt. in 1958. While in England, he married a fellow Marshall Scholar, Susan Long, in 1957. He spent 1958–59 working as a research assistant at St Antony's College, Oxford.

Quainton joined the United States Foreign Service in 1959. As a Foreign Service Officer, he was posted to Sydney 1959–62, to Karachi 1963, to Rawalpindi 1964–66, and to New Delhi 1966–69. He spent 1969–72 at the United States Department of State in Washington, D.C., as the senior political officer for India in the Bureau of Near East and South Asian Affairs. He then spent 1972–73 as a political officer at the U.S. Embassy, Paris. From 1973 through 1976, he was Deputy Chief of Mission in Kathmandu. In 1976, President of the United States Gerald Ford nominated Quainton as United States Ambassador to the Central African Empire. Ambassador Quainton presented his credentials on February 20, 1976, and held this post until June 9, 1978.

He then became Director of the State Department's Office for Combatting Terrorism. During this time he oversaw the task force in charge of dealing with the 1980 Dominican Republic Embassy siege in Bogotá by M-19 guerrillas.[1] He held this post until 1981 and was then named United States Ambassador to Nicaragua, by President Ronald Reagan, presenting his credentials on March 26, 1982, and serving there until May 6, 1984. Reagan then appointed Quainton United States Ambassador to Kuwait, a post which he held from September 1984 to August 1987. Quainton returned to the United States in September 1987, serving as Deputy Inspector General of the Department of State from September 1987 to November 1989.

Newly-inaugurated President George H. W. Bush named Quainton United States Ambassador to Peru; Ambassador Quainton presented his credentials on December 11, 1989, and served until September 16, 1992.

After his tenure in a Peru, Bush then nominated Quainton to be Assistant Secretary of State for Diplomatic Security, holding this office from September 23, 1992, until December 29, 1995. President Bill Clinton then named him Director General of the Foreign Service which Quainton held from December 29, 1995, to August 22, 1997.

In 1997 Quainton left government service and spent 1997–98 as head of the Una Chapman Cox Foundation. He then became president and CEO of the . Since 2003, he has been the Distinguished Diplomat-in-Residence at the School of International Service at American University.

References[]

  1. ^ The Tampa Tribune, Feb. 29th 1980.

External links[]

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
United States Ambassador to the Central African Empire
February 20, 1976 – July 9, 1978
Succeeded by
Goodwin Cooke
Government offices
Preceded by
Heyward Isham
Coordinator for Counterterrorism
August 16, 1978 – August 1, 1981
Succeeded by
Robert M. Sayre
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Lawrence A. Pezzullo
United States Ambassador to Nicaragua
March 26, 1982 – May 6, 1984
Succeeded by
Harry E. Bergold Jr.
Preceded by
United States Ambassador to Kuwait
September 1984 – August 1987
Succeeded by
W. Nathaniel Howell
Preceded by
Alexander Watson
United States Ambassador to Peru
December 11, 1989 – September 16, 1992
Succeeded by
Government offices
Preceded by
Sheldon J. Krys
Assistant Secretary of State for Diplomatic Security
September 23, 1992 – December 29, 1995
Succeeded by
Eric J. Boswell
Preceded by
Genta H. Holmes
Director General of the Foreign Service
December 29, 1995 – August 22, 1997
Succeeded by
Edward Gnehm
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