List of Americans in Pakistan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of Americans in Pakistan. It includes American immigrants or expatriates who have lived in Pakistan, as well as Pakistani people who are of American descent. The list is sorted alphabetically by the individuals' professions or fields of activity to which they have notably made contributions, such as academia and education, the arts, business, crime, diplomacy, literature and journalism, military or intelligence, music, politics, religion, science and technology, and social work.

To be included in this list, the person must have a Wikipedia article or references implying notability, as well as showing that they are American and have resided in Pakistan.

Academia and education[]

Arts and entertainment[]

Business and economics[]

  • Yasin Anwar, banker and 17th governor of the State Bank of Pakistan; a dual U.S.-Pakistan citizen.[10]
  • Zia Chishti, Pakistani-American business executive
  • Sanzar Kakar, Afghan-American entrepreneur and business leader; raised in Peshawar.[11]

Crime[]

  • The D.C. Five, five American citizens imprisoned on charges of terrorism.[12]
  • Erik Audé, American actor and stuntman imprisoned for drug trafficking.[13]
  • Raymond Allen Davis, former U.S. Army soldier and CIA contractor who shot dead two civilians in Lahore.[14]
  • Khalil al-Deek, Jordanian-American charity worker who lived in Peshawar; extradited to Jordan for charges of militancy-related conspiracy.[15]
  • Adam Yahiye Gadahn, al-Qaeda operative and spokesperson, of Jewish descent, who converted; killed by U.S. drone strike in Waziristan, near the Afghan border.[16]
  • Zahir Jaffer, Pakistani-American citizen involved in the murder of Noor Mukadam in Islamabad.[17]
  • John Walker Lindh, Irish-American convicted for militancy in Afghanistan and Pakistan.[18]
  • José Padilla, Puerto Rican-American convicted for militancy.[19]
  • Stephen Paster, arsonist and member of Jamaat ul-Fuqra who moved to Lahore after release from prison.[20]
  • Ahmad Khan Rahami, Afghan-American detained for terrorism; lived for a year in Quetta, where he had relatives.[21]
  • Bryant Neal Vinas, Hispanic-American convicted for militancy.[22]

Diplomacy[]

Joseph Melrose, diplomat

Health and medicine[]

Literature, activism and journalism[]

Military, intelligence and law enforcement[]

Music[]

Politics[]

Chris Van Hollen, U.S. Congressman

Religion[]

Science and technology[]

  • Mark Schaller, psychological scientist; spent early life in Pakistan.[64]
  • Curt Teichert, German-American palaeontologist and geologist; worked in Quetta from 1961 to 1964 studying paleontology and geology of the Salt Range, and conducting stratigraphic research.[65]

Sports[]

Social work[]

Nancy Dupree, social worker
  • Ann Dunham, cottage industries development consultant for Agricultural Development Bank of Pakistan (ADBP) in Gujranwala; mother of U.S. president Barack Obama.[67]
  • Louis Dupree, professor, archaeologist and anthropologist of Afghan history; spent time in Pakistan as Fulbright Scholar and assisting Afghan immigrants in Peshawar.[68]
  • Nancy Dupree, archaeologist of Afghan history; spent time in Peshawar running a resource centre for Afghan immigrants.[69]
  • Marla Ruzicka, activist and aid worker; initially based in Peshawar to cover the Afghan war.[70]
  • John Solecki, UNHCR officer based in Quetta; taken hostage and released in 2009.[71]
  • Warren Weinstein, development contractor based in Lahore; taken hostage by militants and later killed in a U.S. drone strike near the Afghan border.[72]

See also[]

References[]

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