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Carlos Pascual (diplomat)

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President
  
Barack Obama

Political party
  
Democratic Party

Preceded by
  
Tony Garza

Succeeded by
  
Earl Anthony Wayne

Name
  
Carlos Pascual

Appointed by
  
Barack Obama

Role
  
Diplomat


Carlos Pascual (diplomat) US ambassador to Mexico resigns CNNcom

President
  
Bill Clinton George W. Bush

Education
  
Bishop Amat Memorial High School, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Stanford University, Harvard University

Books
  
Learning to Salsa: New Steps in, Power and Responsibility: Building I, Golden Book on Granada/Alhambra, Golden Book Seville, Andalusia

Similar People
  
Barack Obama, Philip Gordon, David B Sandalow, Daniel Poneman, Daniel Benjamin

Ceres energy conference lunch keynote by ambassador carlos pascual


Carlos Pascual (born 1959) is a Cuban-American diplomat and the former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico and Ukraine.

Contents

Carlos Pascual (diplomat) US ambassador to Mexico Carlos Pascual resigns in wake

An evening with ambassador carlos pascual


Education

Carlos Pascual (diplomat) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons88

Pascual attended Bishop Amat Memorial High School in La Puente California and graduated in 1976. He then earned a B.A. from Stanford University in 1980 and an M.P.P. from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in 1982.

Career

Carlos Pascual (diplomat) Ambassador Carlos Pascual US energy envoy and veteran

Pascual worked for USAID from 1983 to 1995 in Sudan, South Africa and Mozambique, and as Deputy Assistant Administrator for Europe and Eurasia. From July 1998 to January 2000, Pascual served as Special Assistant to the President and NSC Senior Director for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia, and from 1995 to 1998 as Director for the same region, from October 2000 until May 2003, as the U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine.

Carlos Pascual (diplomat) US Ambassador to Mexico resigns over WikiLeaks spat with

He was then named Assistance Coordinator for Europe and Eurasia. In 2004, he was named Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization at the US Department of State.

Pascual worked as Vice President and Director of the Foreign Policy Studies Program at the Brookings Institution where he presided over the creation of the Brookings Doha Center and the Brookings-Tsinghua Center.

Selected by President Barack Obama as ambassador to Mexico, he was confirmed by the United States Senate on August 7, 2009. He presented his credentials to the Mexican government on August 9, 2009 and personally to President Felipe Calderón on October 21, 2009. Pascual submitted his resignation as Ambassador to Mexico on March 19, 2011 in part due to tensions with Calderón. Tensions with President Calderón arose as a result of the WikiLeaks release of diplomatic cables in which Pascual criticized the Mexican military’s ability or willingness to fight the Mexican drug cartels. Pascual is considered to be the first casualty of the Wikileaks affair.

Pascual was appointed the State Department's Special Envoy and Coordinator for International Energy Affairs in May 2011, succeeding David L. Goldwyn.

Pascual serves on the Board of Directors of Centrica, a British multinational electricity and gas utility company.

References

Carlos Pascual (diplomat) Wikipedia