Keiderling was born in the Dominican Republic.[3] Keiderling's father was in the U.S. Foreign Service and had met her Bolivian mother on his first international assignment in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Keiderling grew up primarily in Latin America and Portugal.[4]
Keiderling joined the Foreign Service in 1988. Her U.S. assignments included ones as senior Panama desk officer, public diplomacy desk officer for the Caribbean, acting deputy director for Central American Affairs, strategic language issues coordinator in the Bureau of Human Resources, chief of staff in the Iraq Office, and principal deputy assistant secretary for the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. Her foreign assignments have included serving as deputy chief of mission in Chișinău, Moldova. She has served as public affairs officer in Cuba, Botswana and Kyrgyzstan. Her other international assignments include ones in the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, and Zambia. In 2013, Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro expelled Keiderling and two other U.S. diplomats from the country.
She was tapped by President Obama to become United States Ambassador to Uruguay in 2016 and was confirmed by the Senate later that year, on May 17.[5][6] She assumed her role on June 23, 2016.[7] Her appointment as ambassador ended on June 29, 2019.[8]
From 2019 to 2021, Keiderling served as Deputy Commandant and International Affairs Advisor at the US National War College.[9] She assumed her role as Head of the OSCE Mission to Moldova in October 2022.
Personal life
Keiderling is married to David Franz, also a foreign service officer, and they have two children. In addition to English, she speaks Spanish, Portuguese, French and Russian, as well as some Italian and Romanian.[10]
^"Kelly Keiderling". Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). Archived from the original on 2024-02-21. Retrieved 2 September 2023.