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Ambassadors are the highest-ranking diplomats of the U.S. and are usually based at the embassy in the host country. They are under the jurisdiction of the Department of State and answer directly to the secretary of state ; however, ambassadors serve " at the pleasure of the President ", meaning they can be dismissed at any time.
Current and former Ambassadors to the United States: Chronological Listing by Country; Foreign Embassy Information & Publications - The U.S. Department of State's lists of foreign embassy officers and of foreign consular offices in the United States
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., a leading moderate Republican who lost his seat in the United States Senate to John F. Kennedy in the 1952 elections, was appointed ambassador to the United Nations in 1953 by Dwight D. Eisenhower in gratitude for the defeated senator's role in the new president's defeat of conservative leader Robert A. Taft for the 1952 Republican nomination and subsequent service as ...
Hispanic and Latino American diplomats (1 C, 49 P) U. American officials of the United Nations (6 C, 195 P)
Directors of the American Institute in Taiwan (13 P) F. United States Foreign Service personnel (3 C, 1,031 P) M. ... Pages in category "Diplomats for the United States"
This category contains articles on people who were ambassadors of the United States. Ambassadors are also listed by diplomatic post in Category:Lists of ambassadors of the United States.
The United States ambassador to the United Kingdom, formally the ambassador of the United States of America to the Court of St James's [1] is the official representative of the president of the United States and the American government to the monarch (Court of St. James's) and government of the United Kingdom. [2]
CD, or career diplomats, denotes ambassadors who were appointed from the foreign service. PA, or political appointees, denotes ambassadors who were not appointed from the foreign service. Nominees for ambassadors to foreign states