Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Samantha Jane Power (born September 21, 1970) is an Irish-American journalist, diplomat, and government official who is currently serving as the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development. She previously served as the 28th United States Ambassador to the United Nations from 2013 to 2017. [1]
"A Problem from Hell": America and the Age of Genocide (2002) is a book by American Samantha Power, at that time Professor of Human Rights Practice at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, which explores the United States's understanding of, response to, and inaction on genocides in the 20th century, from the Armenian genocide to the "ethnic cleansings" of the Kosovo War.
The Biden administration nominated Samantha Power to become the next administrator, and she was confirmed by the Senate on a vote of 68–26. [3] List of administrators
On July 4, 2008, Sunstein married Samantha Power, a diplomat and government official who would serve as United States ambassador to the United Nations, whom he met when they both worked as campaign advisors to Barack Obama. [59] The wedding took place in the Church of Mary Immaculate, in Lohar, Waterville, Ireland. [60]
Description: President Barack Obama talks with, from left: Samantha Power, former Senior Director for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights; National Security Advisor Tom Donilon; and Susan Rice, U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations, in the Oval Office, June 5, 2013.
The list includes then Vice President Joe Biden, then-FBI Director James Comey, then-CIA Director John Brennan, then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, and Obama's then-chief of staff Denis McDonough; [26] in addition, Samantha Power, at the time U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, appears on the unmasking records as having ...
Rice in turn would be replaced as Ambassador to the United Nations by Samantha Power. [214] On July 23, 2013, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved Power's nomination. [ 215 ] On August 1, 2013, the Senate confirmed Power in an 87–10 vote.
The "Hutu Ten Commandments" (also "Ten Commandments of the Bahutu") was a document published in the December 1990 edition of Kangura, an anti-Tutsi, Hutu Power Rwandan-language newspaper in Kigali, Rwanda.