Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Position in the U.S. Department of State
The Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs is a position within the United States Department of State that leads the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs charged with implementing American foreign policy in Europe and Eurasia , and with advising the Under Secretary for Political Affairs on matters relating to diplomatic missions within that area.
Originally, the Department of State first established a Division of Western European Affairs in 1909, which handled European states primarily bordering on the Atlantic Ocean and their colonies. The Division of Near Eastern Affairs handled relations with most Central, Eastern, and Southern European countries until after World War I . During the interwar period, responsibility for much of Central and Eastern Europe shifted to the Division of European Affairs, although Greece , Turkey , and Cyprus were handled as part of the Near East until April 18, 1974. Following World War II , the department completed the transfer of responsibility for the former colonies of European nations, except Canada , to the Bureaus of Near Eastern, South Asian, African Affairs, and Far Eastern Affairs.
The Department of State later established the Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs in 1949. This came after the Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of Government, also known as the Hoover Commission , recommended that certain offices be upgraded to bureau level after Congress had increased the number of Assistant Secretaries of State from six to ten. On September 14, 1983, an administrative action changed the title of the incumbent to Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Affairs . On January 12, 1999, the title was changed back to Assistant Secretary for European Affairs.
Officeholders
#
Name
Assumed office
Left office
President served under
Assistant Secretaries of State for European Affairs
1
George Walbridge Perkins, Jr.
August 1, 1949
January 31, 1953
Harry S. Truman
2
Livingston T. Merchant
March 16, 1953
May 6, 1956
Dwight D. Eisenhower
-
James Williams Riddleberger
[ 1]
3
Charles Burke Elbrick
February 14, 1957
November 16, 1958
4
Livingston T. Merchant
November 18, 1958[ 2]
August 20, 1959
-
Walter C. Dowling
[ 3]
5
Foy D. Kohler
December 11, 1959[ 4]
August 19, 1962
Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy
6
William R. Tyler
September 2, 1962
May 18, 1965
John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson
7
John M. Leddy
June 16, 1965
February 19, 1969
Lyndon B. Johnson
8
Martin J. Hillenbrand
February 20, 1969
April 30, 1972
Richard Nixon
9
Walter John Stoessel Jr.
August 9, 1972
January 7, 1974
10
Arthur A. Hartman
January 8, 1974
June 8, 1977
Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
11
George S. Vest
June 16, 1977
April 14, 1981
Jimmy Carter
12
Lawrence Eagleburger
May 14, 1981
January 26, 1982
Ronald Reagan
Assistant Secretaries of State for European and Canadian Affairs
13
Richard R. Burt
February 18, 1983[ 5]
July 18, 1985
Ronald Reagan
14
Rozanne L. Ridgway
July 19, 1985
June 30, 1989[ 6]
15
Raymond G. H. Seitz
August 8, 1989
April 30, 1991
George H. W. Bush
16
Thomas Niles
October 3, 1991
April 1, 1993
17
Stephen A. Oxman
April 2, 1993
August 15, 1994
Bill Clinton
18
Richard Holbrooke
September 13, 1994
February 21, 1996
19
John C. Kornblum
July 3, 1996
August 1, 1997
20
Marc Grossman
August 5, 1997
May 31, 2000
Assistant Secretaries of State for European Affairs
20
Marc Grossman
August 5, 1997
May 31, 2000
Bill Clinton
21
James F. Dobbins
January 4, 2001[ 7]
June 1, 2001[ 8]
Bill Clinton and George W. Bush
22
A. Elizabeth Jones
June 1, 2001
February 28, 2005
George W. Bush
Assistant Secretaries of State for European and Eurasian Affairs
22
A. Elizabeth Jones
June 1, 2001
February 28, 2005
George W. Bush
23
Daniel Fried
May 5, 2005
January 20, 2009
24
Philip H. Gordon
May 15, 2009
March 11, 2013
Barack Obama
25
Victoria Nuland
September 18, 2013
January 20, 2017
-
John A. Heffern (acting)
January 20, 2017
August 23, 2017
Donald Trump
26
A. Wess Mitchell
October 12, 2017
February 15, 2019
-
Michael Murphy (Senior Bureau Official)[ 9]
February 18, 2019
March 18, 2019
-
Philip T. Reeker (acting)
March 18, 2019
July 31, 2021[ 10]
Donald Trump
-
Joe Biden
-
Maureen Cormack (acting)
August 2, 2021
September 28, 2021[ 11]
Joe Biden
27
Karen Donfried
September 30, 2021[ 12]
March 31, 2023
-
Dereck J. Hogan (acting)
April 1, 2023
July 10, 2023
-
Yuri Kim (acting)
July 10, 2023
October 5, 2023
28
James C. O'Brien
October 5, 2023
Incumbent
References
^ Appointed on October 15, 1956; declined appointment.
^ Initially commissioned during Senate recess; after confirmation by Senate, re-commissioned on January 29, 1959.
^ Appointed August 26, 1959, but never took oath of office.
^ Initially commissioned during Senate recess; after confirmation by Senate, re-commissioned on January 27, 1960.
^ He was first nominated on May 10, 1982, but the Senate did not act on this first nomination.
^ The State Department's website [1] gives the date as June 30, 1985, but given the context, this appears to be a typo for 1989.
^ He had previously been nominated on September 26, 2000, but the Senate did not act on that nomination.
^ Department Of State. The Office of Electronic Information, Bureau of Public Affairs. "Dobbins, James" . 2001-2009.state.gov . Retrieved 2019-11-12 .
^ "Technical Difficulties" .
^ "Philip T. Reeker" . United States Department of State . Retrieved 2021-09-28 .
^ "Maureen E. Cormack" . United States Department of State . Retrieved 2021-10-05 .
^ "Technical Difficulties" .
External links