[United States Government Manual]
[June 01, 2004]
[Pages 297-310]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]


[[Page 297]]

DEPARTMENT OF STATE

2201 C Street NW., Washington, DC 20520

Phone, 202-647-4000. Internet, www.state.gov.
SECRETARY OF STATE                                Colin L. Powell
    Ambassador-at-Large and Coordinator           J. Cofer Black
            for Counterterrorism
    U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator                  Randall L. Tobias
    Assistant Secretary for Intelligence          Thomas Fingar, Acting
            and Research
    Assistant Secretary for Legislative           Paul V. Kelly
            Affairs
    Chairman, Foreign Service Grievance           Edward Reidy
            Board
    Chief of Protocol                             Donald B. Ensenat
    Chief of Staff                                Lawrence B. Wilkerson
    Civil Service Ombudsman                       Frederick A. 
                                                          Whittington, 
                                                          Acting
    Counselor of the Department of State          (vacancy)
    Assistant Secretary for the Office            Barbara Pope
            of Civil Rights
    Director, Policy Planning Staff               Mitchell B. Reiss
    Inspector General                             (vacancy)
    Legal Adviser                                 William H. Taft IV
    Special Assistant to the Secretary            Karl Hofmann
            and Executive Secretary of 
            the Department

    Deputy Secretary of State                     Richard L. Armitage
    Under Secretary for Arms Control and          John R. Bolton
            International Security 
            Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for Arms              Stephen G. Rademaker
                Control
        Assistant Secretary for                   John S. Wolf
                Nonproliferation
        Assistant Secretary for                   Lincoln P. Bloomfield, 
                Political-Military                        Jr.
                Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for                   Paula A. DeSutter
                Verification and 
                Compliance
    Under Secretary for Economic,                 Alan P. Larson
            Business, and Agricultural 
            Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for Economic          Earl Anthony Wayne
                and Business Affairs
    Under Secretary for Global Affairs            Paula J. Dobriansky
        Assistant Secretary for                   Lorne W. Craner
                Democracy, Human Rights, 
                and Labor
        Assistant Secretary for                   Robert B. Charles
                International Narcotics 
                and Law Enforcement 
                Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for Oceans            John F. Turner
                and International 
                Environmental and 
                Scientific Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for                   Arthur E. Dewey
                Population, Refugees, 
                and Migration Affairs
    Under Secretary for Management                Grant S. Green, Jr.
        Assistant Secretary for                   William A. Eaton
              Administration
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        Assistant Secretary for Consular          Maura Harty
                Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for                   Francis X. Taylor
                Diplomatic Security and 
                Director of the Office 
                of Foreign Missions
        Assistant Secretary for                   Bruce Morrison, Acting
                Information Resource 
                Management and Chief 
                Information Officer
        Assistant Secretary for Resource          Christopher B. Burnham
                Management and Chief 
                Financial Officer
        Director and Chief Operating              Charles E. Williams
                Officer of Overseas 
                Buildings Operations
        Director General of the Foreign           W. Robert Pearson
                Service and Director of 
                Human Resources
        Director of the Foreign Service           Katherine H. Peterson
                Institute
    Under Secretary for Political                 Marc I. Grossman
            Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for African           Charles R. Snyder
                Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for East              James A. Kelly
                Asian and Pacific 
                Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for European          A. Elizabeth Jones
                and Eurasian Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for Western           Roger F. Noriega
                Hemisphere Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for Near              William J. Burns
                Eastern Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for South             Christina B. Rocca
                Asian Affairs
        Ambassador and Coordinator for            William B. Taylor
                Afghanistan
        Assistant Secretary for                   Kim R. Holmes
                International 
                Organization Affairs
    Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy          Margaret D. Tutwiler
            and Public Affairs
        Assistant Secretary for Public            Richard Boucher
                Affairs and Spokesman 
                for the Department of 
                State
        Assistant Secretary for                   Patricia de Stacy 
                Educational and Cultural                  Harrison
                Affairs

    U.S. Coordinator, International               Frank B. Ward
            Information Programs
    Permanent Representative of the               John F. Maisto
            United States of America to 
            the Organization of American 
            States

United States 
Mission to the 
United Nations 
\1\

799 United Nations Plaza, New York, NY 10017

United States Permanent Representative to the     (vacancy)
        United Nations and Representative in the 
        Security Council
    Deputy United States Representative           James B. Cunningham
            to the United Nations
    United States Representative for              Stuart W. Holliday
            Special Political Affairs in 
            the United Nations
    United States Representative on the           Sichan Siv
          Economic and Social Council
[[Page 299]]

    United States Representative for              Patrick F. Kennedy
            U.N. Management and Reform
    \1\ A description of the organization and functions of the United 
Nations can be found under Selected Multilateral Organizations in this 
book.

[For the Department of State statement of organization, see the Code of 
        Federal Regulations, Title 22, Part 5]

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Department of State advises the President in the formulation and 
execution of foreign policy and promotes the long-range security and 
well-being of the United States. The Department determines and analyzes 
the facts relating to American overseas interests, makes recommendations 
on policy and future action, and takes the necessary steps to carry out 
established policy. In so doing, the Department engages in continuous 
consultations with the American public, the Congress, other U.S. 
departments and agencies, and foreign governments; negotiates treaties 
and agreements with foreign nations; speaks for the United States in the 
United Nations and other international organizations in which the United 
States participates; and represents the United States at international 
conferences.

The Department of State was established by act of July 27, 1789, as the 
Department of Foreign Affairs and was renamed Department of State by act 
of September 15, 1789 (22 U.S.C. 2651 note).
Secretary of State  The Secretary of State is responsible for the 
overall direction, coordination, and supervision of U.S. foreign 
relations and for the interdepartmental activities of the U.S. 
Government abroad. The Secretary is the first-ranking member of the 
Cabinet, is a member of the National Security Council, and is in charge 
of the operations of the Department, including the Foreign Service.
Regional Bureaus  Foreign affairs activities worldwide are handled by 
the geographic bureaus, which include the Bureaus of African Affairs, 
European Affairs, East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Near East Affairs, 
South Asian Affairs, and Western Hemisphere Affairs.
Administration  The Bureau of Administration provides support programs 
to the Department of State and U.S. embassies and consulates. Direct 
services provided to the public and other U.S. Government agencies 
include: authenticating documents used abroad for legal and business 
purposes; responding to requests under the Freedom of Information and 
Privacy Acts and providing the electronic reading room for public 
references to State Department records and information access programs; 
printing official publications; and determining use of the diplomatic 
reception rooms of the Harry S Truman headquarters building in 
Washington, DC.

For further information, visit our Web site at www.state.gov/m/a.

Arms Control  The Bureau of Arms Control is responsible for 
strengthening national security by formulating, negotiating, and 
implementing effective arms control policies, strategies, and 
agreements. The Bureau directs U.S. participation in both bilateral and 
multilateral arms control negotiations and in implementing bodies such 
as the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. It is also 
responsible for all issues involving nuclear weapons, as well as 
monitoring technology developments as they relate to arms control and 
weapons developments.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Arms Control at 202-647-
8478 or 202-647-8681. Fax, 202-736-4472. Internet, www.state.gov/t/ac/.

Consular Affairs  The Bureau of Consular Affairs is responsible for the 
protection and welfare of American citizens and interests abroad; the 
administration and enforcement of the provisions of the immigration and 
nationality laws insofar as they concern the Department of State and 
Foreign Service; and the issuance of passports and visas and related 
services.

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Approximately 7 million passports a year are issued by the Office of 
Passport Services of the Bureau at the processing centers in Portsmouth, 
NH, and Charleston, SC, and the regional agencies in Boston, MA; 
Chicago, IL; Honolulu, HI; Houston, TX; Los Angeles, CA; Miami, FL; New 
Orleans, LA; New York, NY; Philadelphia, PA; San Francisco, CA; Seattle, 
WA; Stamford, CT; and Washington, DC. In addition, the Bureau helps 
secure America's borders against entry by terrorists or narco-
traffickers, facilitates international adoptions, and supports parents 
whose children have been abducted abroad.

For further information, visit the Bureau of Consular Affairs Web site 
at www.travel.state.gov.

Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor  The Bureau of Democracy, Human 
Rights, and Labor (DRL) is responsible for developing and implementing 
U.S. policy on democracy, human rights, labor, and religious freedom. 
The Bureau undertakes dialog with foreign governments and builds 
partnerships in multilateral organizations in order to build global 
consensus in support of democratic rule and universal human rights 
principles. It is responsible for preparing the annual Country Reports 
on Human Rights Practices which are regarded as the most comprehensive 
and objective assessment of human rights conditions around the world. 
Through the Human Rights and Democracy Fund, DRL provides comprehensive 
technical and financial support for democracy and human rights, which 
helps prosecute war criminals, promote religious freedom, monitor free 
and fair elections, support workers' rights, encourage the establishment 
of the rule of law, and facilitate the growth of civil society.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, 
and Labor at 202-647-2126.

Diplomatic Security  The Bureau of Diplomatic Security provides a secure 
environment to promote U.S. interests at home and abroad. The Bureau's 
mission includes the protection of the Secretary of State and other 
senior Government officials, residents, and visiting foreign dignitaries 
and foreign missions in the United States; the conduct of criminal, 
counterintelligence, and personnel security investigations; ensuring the 
integrity of international traveldocuments, sensitive information, 
classified processing equipment, and management information systems; the 
physical and technical protection of domestic and overseas facilities of 
the Department of State; providing professional law enforcement and 
security training to U.S. and foreign personnel; and a comprehensive, 
multifaceted overseas security program servicing the needs of U.S. 
missions and the resident U.S. citizens and business communities. 
Through the Office of Foreign Missions, the Bureau regulates the 
domestic activities of the foreign diplomatic community in the areas of 
taxation, real property acquisitions, motor vehicle operation, domestic 
travel, and customs processing.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Diplomatic Security. 
Phone, 571-345-2499. Fax, 571-345-2527. Internet, www.ds.state.gov.

Economic and Business Affairs  The Bureau of Economic and Business 
Affairs has overall responsibility for formulating and implementing 
policy regarding foreign economic matters, including resource and food 
policy, international communications and information policy, 
international energy issues, trade, economic sanctions, international 
finance and development, and aviation and maritime affairs.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Economic and Business 
Affairs. Phone, 202-647-7971. Fax, 202-647-5713.

Educational andCultural Affairs  The Bureau of Educational and Cultural 
Affairs administers the principal provisions of the Mutual Educational 
and Cultural Exchange Act (the Fulbright-Hays Act), including U.S. 
international educational and cultural exchange programs. These programs 
include the prestigious Fulbright Programfor students, scholars, and 
teachers; the International Visitor Program, which brings leaders and 
future leaders from other countries to the United States for

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consultation with their professional colleagues; and cooperative 
relationships with U.S. nongovernmental organizations that support the 
Bureau's mission.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Educational and Cultural 
Affairs. Phone, 202-203-5118. Fax, 202-203-5115. Internet, http://
exchanges.state.gov/.

Foreign Missions  The Office of Foreign Missions (OFM) operates the 
motor vehicles, tax, customs, real property, and travel programs to 
regulate and serve the 175 foreign missions in the United States and 
approximately 55,000 foreign mission members and dependents. The Office 
is also an advocate for improved treatment of U.S. missions and 
personnel abroad. It guards the U.S. public against abuses of diplomatic 
privilege and preserves U.S. security interests. OFM maintains regional 
offices in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Miami, and 
Honolulu.

For further information, contact the Office of Foreign Missions. Phone, 
202-647-3417. Fax, 202-647-1919.

Foreign Service Institute  The Foreign Service Institute of the 
Department of State is the Federal Government's primary training 
institution for officers and support personnel of the foreign affairs 
community. In addition to the Department of State, the Institute 
provides training for more than 40 other governmental agencies. The 
Institute's more than 425 courses, including some 60 foreign language 
courses, range in length from 1 day to 2 years. The courses are designed 
to promote successful performance in each professional assignment, to 
ease the adjustment to other countries and cultures, and to enhance the 
leadership and management capabilities of the foreign affairs community.

For further information, contact the Foreign Service Institute. Phone, 
703-302-6729. Fax, 703-302-7227.

Intelligence and Research  The Bureau coordinates the activities of U.S. 
intelligence agencies to ensure that their overseas activities are 
consistent with U.S. foreign policy objectives and interests. It also 
provides all-source analysis which gives the Department insights and 
information to foreign policy questions. It organizes seminars on topics 
of high interest to policymakers and the intelligence community and 
monitors and analyzes foreign public and media opinion on key issues.

For further information, call 202-647-1080.

International Information Programs  The Bureau of International 
Information Programs is the principal international strategic 
communications service for the U.S. foreign affairs community. The 
Bureau designs, develops, and implements a variety of information 
initiatives and strategic communications programs, including Internet 
and print publications, traveling and electronically transmitted speaker 
programs, and information resource services. These reach, and are 
created strictly for, key international audiences, such as U.S. 
diplomatic missions abroad, the media, government officials, opinion 
leaders, and the general public in more than 140 countries around the 
world.

For further information, contact the Bureau of International Information 
Programs. Phone, 202-619-4545. Fax, 202-619-6557. Internet, 
www.state.gov/r/iip/.

International Narcotics and Law Enforcement  The Bureau of International 
Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs is responsible for developing, 
coordinating, and implementing international narcotics control and 
anticrime assistance activities of the Department of State. It provides 
advice on international narcotics control matters for the Office of 
Management and Budget, the National Security Council, and the White 
House Office of National Drug Control Policy and ensures implementation 
of U.S. policy in international narcotics matters. The Bureau also 
provides guidance on narcotics control and anticrime matters to chiefs 
of missions and directs narcotics control coordinators at posts abroad. 
It communicates or authorizes communication, as appropriate, with 
foreign governments on drug control and anticrime matters including 
negotiating,

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concluding, and terminating agreements relating to international 
narcotics control and anticrime programs.

For further information, contact the Bureau of International Narcotics 
and Law Enforcement Affairs. Phone, 202-776-8750. Fax, 202-776-8775.

International Organizations  The Bureau of International Organization 
Affairs provides guidance and support for U.S. participation in 
international organizations and conferences and formulates and 
implements U.S. policy toward international organizations, with 
particular emphasis on those organizations which make up the United 
Nations system. It provides direction in the development, coordination, 
and implementation of U.S. multilateral policy.

For further information, call 202-647-9326. Fax, 202-647-2175.

Medical Services  The Office of Medical Services develops, manages, and 
staffs a worldwide primary health care system for U.S. citizen employees 
and their eligible dependents residing overseas. In support of its 
overseas operations, the Office approves and monitors the medical 
evacuation of patients, conducts pre-employment and in-service physical 
examinations, and provides clinical referral and advisory services. The 
Office also provides for emergency medical response in the event of a 
crisis at an overseas post.

For further information, fax 202-663-1613.

Nonproliferation  The Nonproliferation Bureau leads the U.S. 
Government's efforts to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass 
destruction, their delivery systems, and advanced conventional arms. The 
Bureau is responsible for nuclear nonproliferation through support of 
the International Atomic Energy Agency, implementing the Nuclear Non-
Proliferation Treaty, securing nuclear materials in the new independent 
States of the former Soviet Union, disposing of stockpiles of fissile 
materials, advancing civil nuclear cooperation under safe and sound 
conditions, and promoting nuclear safety and effective protection, 
control, and accounting of nuclear material worldwide. The Bureau is 
also responsible for developing and implementing all policies to curb 
the proliferation of chemical and biological weapons and missiles, and 
promoting restraint in transfers of conventional arms. It also pursues 
regional and bilateral initiatives and negotiations designed to reduce 
proliferation pressures and destabilizing arms acquisitions, including 
negotiations with respect to Russia, China, South Asia, the Middle East, 
and the Korean Peninsula.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Nonproliferation. Phone, 
202-647-8699. Fax, 202-736-4863.

Oceans, International Environmental, and Scientific Affairs  The Bureau 
of Oceans, and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs (OES) 
serves as the foreign policy focal point for international oceans, 
environmental, and scientific efforts. OES projects, protects, and 
promotes U.S. global interests in these areas by articulating U.S. 
foreign policy, encouraging international cooperation, and negotiating 
treaties and other instruments of international law. The Bureau serves 
as the principal adviser to the Secretary of State on international 
environment, science, and technology matters and takes the lead in 
coordinating and brokering diverse interests in the interagency process, 
where the development of international policies or the negotiation and 
implementation of relevant international agreements are concerned. The 
Bureau seeks to promote the peaceful exploitation of outer space, 
develop and coordinate policy on international health issues, encourage 
government to government scientific cooperation, and prevent the 
destruction and degradation of the planet's natural resources and the 
global environment.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Oceans and International 
Environmental and Scientific Affairs. Phone, 202-647-0978. Fax, 202-647-
0217.

Overseas Building Operations  The Bureau of Overseas Buildings 
Operations (OBO) directs the worldwide overseas buildings program for 
the Department of

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State and the U.S. Government community serving abroad under the 
authority of the chiefs of mission. Along with the input and support of 
other State Department bureaus, foreign affairs agencies, and Congress, 
OBO sets worldwide priorities for the design, construction, acquisition, 
maintenance, use, and sale of real properties and the use of sales 
proceeds. OBO also serves as the Single Real Property Manager of all 
overseas facilities under the authority of the chiefs of mission.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Overseas Buildings 
Operations. Phone, 703-875-4131. Fax, 703-875-5043. Internet, 
www.state.gov/obo.

Political-Military Affairs  The Bureau of Political-Military Affairs is 
the Department of State's link with the Department of Defense and is the 
Department of State's lead on operational military matters regarding the 
global war on terrorism. The Bureau formulates and implements policies 
on international security, diplomatic aspects of military operations, 
peacekeeping issues, critical infrastructure protection, and arms 
transfers. Its responsibilities also include regional security, small 
arms and light weapons policies, security assistance, humanitarian 
demining programs, contingency planning, burden-sharing negotiations, 
and allocating security assistance funds to support foreign policy goals 
and the military capabilities of friends and allies.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Political-Military 
Affairs. Phone, 202-647-5104. Fax, 202-736-4413. Internet, 
www.state.gov/www/global/arms/bureaupm.html.

Population, Refugees, and Migration  The Bureau of Population, Refugees, 
and Migration directs the Department's population, refugee, and 
migration policy development. It administers U.S. contributions to 
international organizations for humanitarian assistance- and protection-
related programs on behalf of refugees, conflict victims, and internally 
displaced persons, and provides U.S. contributions to nongovernmental 
organizations which provide assistance and protection to refugees 
abroad. The Bureau oversees the annual admissions of refugees to the 
United States for permanent resettlement, working closely with the 
Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Health and Human 
Services, and various State and private voluntary agencies. It 
coordinates U.S. international population policy and promotes its goals 
through bilateral and multilateral cooperation. It works closely with 
the U.S. Agency for International Development, which administers U.S. 
international population programs. The Bureau also coordinates the 
Department's international migration policy through bilateral and 
multilateral diplomacy. The Bureau oversees efforts to encourage greater 
participation in humanitarian assistance and refugee resettlement on the 
part of foreign governments and uses humanitarian diplomacy to increase 
access and assistance to those in need in the absence of political 
solutions.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and 
Migration. Phone, 202-663-1071. Fax, 202-663-1002. Internet, 
www.state.gov/g/prm.

Protocol  The Chief of Protocol is the principal adviser to the U.S. 
Government, the President, the Vice President, and the Secretary of 
State on matters of diplomatic procedure governed by law or 
international custom and practice. The Office is responsible for:
    --visits of foreign chiefs of state, heads of government, and other 
high officials to the United States;
    --organizing credential presentations of newly arrived Ambassadors 
to the President and to the Secretary of State;
    --operation of the President's guest house, Blair House;
    --delegations representing the President at official ceremonies 
abroad;
    --conducting official ceremonial functions and public events;
    --official interpretation of the order of precedence;
    --conducting an outreach program of cultural enrichment and 
substantive briefings of the Diplomatic Corps;
    --accreditation of over 100,000 embassy, consular, international

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organization, and other foreign government personnel, members of their 
families, and domestics throughout the United States;
    --determining entitlement to diplomatic or consular immunity;
    --publication of diplomatic and consular lists;
    --resolution of problems arising out of diplomatic or consular 
immunity such as legal and police matters; and
    --approving the opening of embassy and consular offices in 
conjunction with the Office of Foreign Missions.

For further information, contact the Office of the Chief of Protocol. 
Phone, 202-647-2663. Fax, 202-647-1560.

Verification and Compliance  The Bureau of Verification and Compliance 
has as its principal responsibility the overall supervision (including 
oversight of policy and resources) within the Department of State of all 
matters relating to verification and compliance with international arms 
control, nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements or commitments. It 
is also the principal policy community representative to the 
intelligence community on verification and compliance matters, and 
participates in all interagency groups or organizations with the U.S. 
Government related to verification and compliance issues. The Bureau 
seeks to fulfill its mandate by ensuring: (a) a rigorous adherence to 
exacting verification standards in the arms control and nonproliferation 
arena; (b) vigorous efforts to ensure compliance with arms control, 
nonproliferation, and disarmament agreements and commitments, including 
a rigorous review of proliferation behavior to determine sanctionable 
activities; and (c) effective promotion of U.S. monitoring capabilities 
through advocacy for and support of the intelligence capabilities 
necessary to these ends.

For further information, contact the Bureau of Verification and 
Compliance. Phone, 202-647-5315. Fax, 202-647-1321.

Foreign Service  To a great extent the future of our country depends on 
the relations we have with other countries, and those relations are 
conducted principally by the U.S. Foreign Service. Trained 
representatives stationed worldwide provide the President and the 
Secretary of State with much of the raw material from which foreign 
policy is made and with the recommendations that help shape it.
    Ambassadors are the personal representatives of the President and 
report to the President through the Secretary of State. Ambassadors have 
full responsibility for implementation of U.S. foreign policy by any and 
all U.S. Government personnel within their country of assignment, except 
those under military commands. Their responsibilities include 
negotiating agreements between the United States and the host country, 
explaining and disseminating official U.S. policy, and maintaining 
cordial relations with that country's government and people.
    A listing of Foreign Service posts, together with addresses and 
telephone numbers and key personnel, appears in Key Officers of Foreign 
Service Posts--Guide for Business Representatives, which is for sale by 
the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, 
DC 20402.

            United States Diplomatic Offices--Foreign Service
         (C: Consular Office; N: No Embassy or Consular Office)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Country/Capitol                     Chief of Mission
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Afghanistan/Kabul.........................  Zalymay Khalilzad
Albania/Tirana............................  James Franklin Jeffrey
Algeria/Algiers...........................  Richard W. Erdman
Andorra/Andorra La Vella..................  George L. Argyros, Sr.
Angola/Luanda.............................  Christopher William Dell
Antigua and Barbuda/St. John's (N)........  Earl Norfleet Phillips
Argentina/Buenos Aires....................  Lino Gutierrez
Armenia/Yerevan...........................  John M. Ordway
Australia/Canberra........................  John Thomas Schieffer
Austria/Vienna............................  Lyons Brown, Jr.
Azerbaijan/Baku...........................  Reno L. Harnish
Bahamas/Nassau............................  J. Richard Blankenship
Bahrain/Manama............................  Ronald E. Neumann
Bangladesh/Dhaka..........................  Harry K. Thomas
Barbados/Bridgetown.......................  Earl Norfleet Phillips
Belarus/Minsk.............................  Michael G. Kozak
Belgium/Brussels..........................  (Vacancy)
Belize/Belize City........................  Russell F. Freeman
Benin/Cotonou.............................  Wayne E. Neill
Bolivia/La Paz............................  David N. Greenlee
Bosnia and Herzegovina/Sarajevo...........  Clifford G. Bond
Botswana/Gaborone.........................  Joseph Huggins
Brazil/Brasilia...........................  John J. Danilovich
Brunei Darussalam/Bandar Seri Begawan.....  Gene B. Christy

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Bulgaria/Sofia............................  James W. Pardew
Burkina Faso/Ouagadougou..................  J. Anthony Holmes
Burma/Rangoon.............................  Carmen Martinez
Burundi/Bujumbura.........................  James Howard Yellin
Cambodia/Phnom Penh.......................  Charles Aaron Ray
Cameroon/Yaounde..........................  George McDade Staples
Canada/Ottawa.............................  Argeo Paul Cellucci
Cape Verde/Praia..........................  Donald C. Johnson
Central African Republic/Bangui...........  (Suspended Operations)
Chad/N'Djamena............................  Marc McGowan Wall
Chile/Santiago............................  Craig A. Kelly
China/Beijing.............................  Clark T. Randt, Jr.
Colombia/Bogota...........................  Anne Woods Patterson
Comoros/Moroni (N)........................  John Price
Congo, Democratic Republic of the           Roger A. Meece
 (formerly Zaire)/Kinshasa.
Congo, Republic of the/Brazzaville........  Robin Renee Sanders
Costa Rica/San Jose.......................  (Vacancy)
Cote d'Ivoire/Abidjan.....................  Aubrey Hooks
Croatia/Zagreb............................  Ralph Frank
Cuba/Havana (U.S. Interests Section)......  James C. Cason
Curacao/Willemstad........................  Deborah A. Bolton
Cyprus/Nicosia............................  Michael Klosson
Czech Republic/Prague.....................  William J. Cabaniss, Jr.
Denmark/Copenhagen........................  Stuart A. Bernstein
Djibouti, Republic of/Djibouti............  Marguerita D. Ragsdale
Dominican Republic/Santo Domingo..........  Hans H. Hertell
East Timor/Dili...........................  Grover Joseph Rees III
Ecuador/Quito.............................  Kristie Anne Kinney
Egypt/Cairo...............................  C. David Welch
El Salvador/San Salvador..................  Rose M. Likins
Equatorial Guinea/Malabo..................  George McDade Staples
Eritrea, State of/Asmara..................  Scott H. DeLisi
Estonia/Tallinn...........................  Joseph DeThomas
Ethiopia/Addis Ababa......................  Aurelia E. Brazeal
Fiji Islands, Republic of/Suva............  David L. Lyon
Finland/Helsinki..........................  Earle I. Mack
France/Paris..............................  Howard H. Leach
Gabonese Republic/Libreville..............  Kenneth P. Moorefield
Gambia/Banjul.............................  Jackson Chester McDonald
Georgia/Tbilisi...........................  Richard Monroe Miles
Germany/Berlin............................  Daniel R. Coats
Ghana/Accra...............................  Mary Carlin Yates
Greece/Athens.............................  Thomas J. Miller
Grenada/St. George (N)....................  Earl Norfleet Phillips
Guatemala/Guatemala.......................  John Randle Hamilton
Guinea/Conakry............................  R. Barrie Walkley
Guinea-Bissau/Bissau (N)..................  Richard Allan Roth
Guyana/Georgetown.........................  Roland W. Bullen
Haiti/Port-au-Prince......................  James B. Foley
Holy See/Vatican City.....................  Jim Nicholson
Honduras/Tegucigalpa......................  Larry Leon Palmer
Hong Kong/Hong Kong (C)...................  James R. Keith
Hungary/Budapest..........................  George Herbert Walker III
Iceland/Reykjavik.........................  James Kenny
India/New Delhi...........................  David C. Mulford
Indonesia/Jakarta.........................  Ralph Leo Boyce, Jr.
Iraq/Baghdad..............................  John D. Negroponte
Ireland/Dublin............................  James Kenny
Israel/Tel Aviv...........................  Daniel C. Kurtzer
Italy/Rome................................  Melvin Sembler
Jamaica/Kingston..........................  Sue McCourt Cobb
Japan/Tokyo...............................  Howard H. Baker, Jr.
Jerusalem (C).............................  David D. Pearce
Jordan/Amman..............................  David Michael Satterfield
Kazakhstan/Almaty.........................  John M. Ordway
Kenya/Nairobi.............................  William M. Bellamy
Kiribati/Tarawa (N).......................  David L. Lyon
Korea/Seoul...............................  Christopher R. Hill
Kosovo/Pristina...........................  Marcie Ries
Kuwait/Kuwait.............................  Richard LeBaron
Kyrgyz Republic/Bishkek...................  Stephen M. Young
Laos/Vientiane............................  Patricia M. Haslach
Latvia/Riga...............................  Brian E. Carlson
Lebanon/Beirut............................  Jeffrey D. Feltman
Lesotho/Maseru............................  Robert Geers Loftis
Liberia/Monrovia..........................  John W. Blaney
Liechtenstein/Vaduz.......................  Pamela Willeford
Lithuania/Vilnius.........................  Stephen D. Mull
Luxembourg/Luxembourg.....................  Peter Terpeluk, Jr.
Macedonia/Skopje..........................  Lawrence E. Butler
Madagascar/Antananarivo...................  Wanda Nesbitt
Malawi/Lilongwe...........................  Steven A. Browning
Malaysia/Kuala Lumpur.....................  Marie T. Huhtala
Maldives/Male (N).........................  Jeffrey Lunstead
Mali/Bamako...............................  Vicki Huddleston
Malta/Valletta............................  Anthony Horace Gioia
Marshall Islands/Majuro...................  Greta N. Morris
Mauritania/Nouakchott.....................  Joseph E. LeBaron
Mauritius/Port Louis......................  John Price
Mexico/Mexico City........................  Antonio O. Garza, Jr.
Micronesia/Kolonia........................  Larry Miles Dinger
Moldova/Chisinau..........................  Heather M. Hodges
Mongolia/Ulaanbaatar......................  Pamela J. H. Slutz
Morocco/Rabat.............................  Thomas T. Riley
Mozambique/Maputo.........................  Helen R. Meagher La Lime
Namibia/Windhoek..........................  Kevin Joseph McGuire
Nauru/Yaren (N)...........................  David L. Lyon
Nepal/Kathmandu...........................  Michael E. Malinowski
Netherlands/The Hague.....................  Clifford M. Sobel
New Zealand/Wellington....................  Charles J. Swindells
Nicaragua/Managua.........................  Barbara C. Moore
Niger/Niamey..............................  Gail Dennise Thomas Mathieu
Nigeria/Abuja.............................  John Campbell
Norway/Oslo...............................  John D. Ong
Oman/Muscat...............................  Richard Lewis Baltimore III
Pakistan/Islamabad........................  Nancy J. Powell
Palau/Koror...............................  Francis J. Ricciardone, Jr.
Panama/Panama.............................  Linda Ellen Watt
Papua New Guinea/Port Moresby.............  Robert W. Fitts
Paraguay/Asuncion.........................  John F. Keane
Peru/Lima.................................  John R. Dawson
Philippines/Manila........................  Francis J. Ricciardone, Jr.
Poland/Warsaw.............................  Victor Henderson Ashe
Portugal/Lisbon...........................  John N. Palmer
Qatar/Doha................................  Maureen Quinn
Romania/Bucharest.........................  Jack Dyer Crouch III
Russian Federation/Moscow.................  Alexander R. Vershbow
Rwanda/Kigali.............................  Margaret McMillion
St. Kitts and Nevis/Basseterre (N)........  Earl Norfleet Phillips
St. Lucia/Castries (N)....................  Earl Norfleet Phillips
St. Vincent and the Grenadines/Kingstown    Earl Norfleet Phillips
 (N).
Samoa/Apia................................  Charles J. Swindells
Sao Tome and Principe/Sao Tome (N)........  Kenneth P. Moorefield
Saudi Arabia/Riyadh.......................  James C. Oberwetter
Senegal/Dakar.............................  Richard Allan Roth
Serbia and Montenegro/Belgrade............  Michael Christian Polt

[[Page 307]]


Seychelles/Victoria.......................  John Price
Sierra Leone/Freetown.....................  Thomas Neil Hull III
Singapore/Singapore.......................  Franklin L. Lavin
Slovak Republic/Bratislava................  Ronald Weiser
Slovenia/Ljubljana........................  Thomas Bolling Robertson
Solomon Islands/Honiara...................  Robert W. Fitts
South Africa/Pretoria, Cape Town..........  Jendayi Elizabeth Frazer
Spain/Madrid..............................  George L. Argyros, Sr.
Sri Lanka/Colombo.........................  Jeffrey Lunstead
Sudan/Khartoum............................  (Vacancy)
Suriname/Paramaribo.......................  Daniel A. Johnson
Swaziland/Mbabane.........................  James David McGee
Sweden/Stockholm..........................  Miles T. Bivins
Switzerland/Bern..........................  Pamela Willeford
Syrian Arab Republic/Damascus.............  Margaret Scobey
Tajikistan/Dushanbe.......................  Richard Hoagland
Tanzania/Dar es Salaam....................  (Vacancy)
Thailand/Bangkok..........................  Darryl Norman Johnson
Togolese, Republic/Lome...................  Gregory W. Engle
Tonga/Nuku'alofa (N)......................  David L. Lyon
Trinidad and Tobago/Port-of-Spain.........  Roy L. Austin
Tunisia/Tunis.............................  William J. Hudson
Turkey/Ankara.............................  Eric S. Edelman
Turkmenistan/Ashgabat.....................  Tracy Jacobson
Tuvalu/Funafuti (N).......................  David L. Lyon
Uganda/Kampala............................  Jimmy L. Kolker
Ukraine/Kiev..............................  John E. Herbst
United Arab Emirates/Abu Dhabi............  Michele J. Sison
United Kingdom/London.....................  William S. Farish
Uruguay/Montevideo........................  Martin J. Silverstein
Uzbekistan/Tashkent.......................  Jon Purnell
Vanuatu/Port Vila (N).....................  Robert W. Fitts
Venezuela/Caracas.........................  Charles S. Shapiro
Vietnam/Hanoi.............................  Michael W. Marine
Yemen/Sanaa...............................  Thomas Charles Krajeski
Yugoslavia/Belgrade.......................  William Dale Montgomery
Zambia/Lusaka.............................  Martin George Brennan
Zimbabwe/Harare...........................  Joseph Gerard Sullivan
------------------------------------------------------------------------


      United States Permanent Diplomatic Missions to International
                              Organizations
------------------------------------------------------------------------
               Organization                          Ambassador
------------------------------------------------------------------------
European Union/Brussels...................  Rockwell A. Schnabel
International Civil Aviation Organization.  Edward Stimpson
North Atlantic Treaty Organization/         R. Nicholas Burns
 Brussels.
Organization of American States/            Roger F. Noriega
 Washington, DC.
Organization for Economic Cooperation and   Connie Morella
 Development/Paris.
Organization for Security and Co-operation  Stephan Michael Minikes
 in Europe/Vienna.
United Nations/Geneva.....................  Kevin E. Moley
United Nations/New York...................  (Vacancy)
United Nations/Vienna.....................  Kenneth C. Brill
U.S. Mission to United Nations Agencies     Tony P. Hall
 for Food and Agriculture.
U.S. Mission to United Nations Economic,    Louise V. Oliver
 Scientific and Cultural Organization/
 Paris.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sources of 
Information

Contracts  General inquiries may be directed to the Office of 
Acquisitions Management (A/LM/AQM), Department of State, P.O. Box 9115, 
Arlington, VA 22219. Phone, 703-875-6060. Fax, 703-875-6085.
Diplomatic and Official Passports  Inquirers for these types of 
passports should contact their respective travel offices. The U.S. 
Government only issues these types of passports to individuals traveling 
abroad in connection with official employment. For additional 
information, please refer to the Consular Affairs Web site. Internet, 
www.travel.state.gov.
Electronic Access  The Department's Bureau of Public Affairs, Office of 
Public Communication, coordinates the dissemination of public electronic 
information for the Department. The main Web site (Internet, 
www.state.gov) and the Secretary's Web site (Internet, 
secretary.state.gov) provide comprehensive, up-to-date information on 
foreign policy, support for U.S. businesses, careers, the 
counterterrorism rewards program, and much more.
    The Bureau of Consular Affairs Web site (Internet, 
www.travel.state.gov) provides travel warnings and other information 
designed to help Americans travel safely abroad, as well as information 
on U.S. passports and visas and downloadable applications. The Bureau of 
Intelligence and Research has established a geographic learning Web site 
(Internet, geography.state.gov), to assist in teaching geography and 
foreign affairs to students in grades K-12.

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    The State Department Electronic Reading Room at foia.state.gov uses 
new information technologies to enable access to unique historical 
records of international significance which have been made available to 
the public under the Freedom of Information Act or as a special 
collection.
Employment  Inquiries about employment in the Foreign Service should be 
directed to HR/REE, Room H-518, 2401 E Street NW, Washington, DC 20522. 
Phone, 202-261-8888. Internet, www.careers.state.gov. Information about 
civil service positions in the Department of State and copies of civil 
service job announcements can be accessed through the Internet, at 
www.careers.state.gov. Individual questions may be directed to 
[email protected]. Job information staff is also available to answer 
questions from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. eastern time on Federal workdays. 
Phone, 202-663-2176.
Freedom of Information Act and Privacy Act Requests  Requests from the 
public for Department of State records should be addressed to the 
Director, Office of IRM Programs and Services, Department of State, SA-
2, 515 Twenty-second Street NW., Washington, DC 20522-6001. Phone, 202-
261-8300. Individuals are requested to indicate on the outside of the 
envelope the statute under which they are requesting access: FOIA 
REQUEST or PRIVACY REQUEST.
    A public reading room, where unclassified and declassified documents 
may be inspected, is located in the Department of State, SA-2, 515 
Twenty-second Street NW., Washington, DC 20522-6001. Phone, 202-261-
8484. Directions to the reading room may be obtained from receptionists 
at public entrances to the Department.
    Additional information about the Department's FOIA program can be 
found on the FOIA electronic reading room (Internet, foia.state.gov).
Missing Persons, Emergencies, Deaths of Americans Abroad  For 
information concerning missing persons, emergencies, travel warnings, 
overseas voting, judicial assistance, and arrests or deaths of Americans 
abroad, contact the Office of American Citizens Services and Crisis 
Management, Department of State. Phone, 888-407-4747 or 317-472-2328 
(international). Internet, www.travel.state.gov. Correspondence should 
be directed to this address: Overseas Citizens Services, Bureau of 
Consular Affairs, Department of State, Washington, DC 20520.
    Inquiries regarding international parental child abduction or 
adoption of foreign children by private U.S. citizens should be directed 
to the Office of Children's Issues, CA/OCS/CI, Department of State, 2201 
C Street NW., Washington, DC 20520-4818. Phone, 888-407-4747 or 317-472-
2328 (international). Internet, www.travel.state.gov.
Passports  Passport information is available through the Internet, at 
travel.state.gov. For recorded general passport information, contact any 
of the Regional Passport Agencies at the telephone numbers listed in the 
following table. For passport assistance and information, you may call 
the National Passport Information Center (phone, 900-225-5674; TDD, 900-
225-7778), and you will be charged $0.35 per minute to listen to 
automated messages and $1.05 per minute to speak with an operator. You 
may also call the National Passport Information Center using a major 
credit card at a flat rate of $4.95 (phone, 888-362-8668; TDD, 888-498-
3648). These rates are subject to change. Correspondence should be 
directed to the appropriate Regional Agency or the Correspondence 
Branch, Passport Services, Room 510, 1111 Nineteenth Street NW., 
Washington, DC 20524.

                                           Regional Passport Agencies
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                        City                                           Address                       Telephone
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Boston, MA.........................................  Suite 247, 10 Causeway St., 02222..........    617-878-0900
Charleston, SC.....................................  Bldg. 643, 1269 Holland St., 29405.........    843-308-5501
Chicago, IL........................................  Suite 1803, 230 S. Dearborn St., 60604.....    312-341-6020

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Honolulu, HI.......................................  Suite I-330, Box 50185, 300 Ala Moana          808-522-8283
                                                      Blvd., 96850.
Houston, TX........................................  Suite 1400, 1919 Smith St., 77002..........    713-751-0294
Los Angeles, CA....................................  Suite 1000, 11000 Wilshire Blvd., 90024....    310-575-5700
Miami, FL..........................................  3d Fl., 51 SW. 1st Ave., 33130.............    305-539-3600
New Orleans, LA....................................  Suite 1300, 365 Canal St., 70130...........    504-412-2600
New York, NY.......................................  10th Fl., 376 Hudson St., 10014............    212-206-3500
Norwalk, CT........................................  50 Washington St., 06856...................    203-299-5443
Philadelphia, PA...................................  Rm. 103, 200 Chestnut St., 19106...........    215-418-5937
Portsmouth, NH.....................................  National Passport Center, 31 Rochester         603-334-0500
                                                      Ave., 03801.
San Francisco, CA..................................  5th Fl., 95 Hawthorne St., 94105-3901......    415-538-2700
Seattle, WA........................................  Suite 992, 915 2d Ave., 98174..............    206-808-5700
Washington, DC.....................................  Suite 300, 1111 19th St. NW., 20524........    202-647-0518
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Public Affairs  The Bureau of Public Affairs carries out the Secretary's 
foreign policy objectives and helps American and foreign audiences 
understand the importance of foreign affairs. Led by the Assistant 
Secretary, who also serves as Department spokesman, the Bureau pursues 
the State Department's mission to inform the American people and foreign 
audiences and to feed their concerns and comments back to policymakers. 
Phone, 202-647-6575.
Publications  Publications that are produced on a regular basis include 
Background Notes and the Foreign Relations series. The Bureau of Public 
Affairs also occasionally publishes brochures and other publications to 
inform the public of U.S. diplomatic efforts. All publications are 
available on the Internet at www.state.gov.
Small Business Information  Information about doing business with the 
Department of State is available from the Office of Small and 
Disadvantaged Business Utilization. Phone, 703-875-6822. Internet, 
www.statebuy.gov/home.htm.
Telephone Directory  The Department's telephone directory is available 
for sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, 
Washington, DC 20402.
Tips for U.S. Travelers Abroad  The following pamphlets from the Bureau 
of Consular Affairs are posted on the Internet at travel.state.gov and 
are for sale for $1-$3 (except where noted) by the Superintendent of 
Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402:
    Travel Warning on Drugs Abroad contains important facts on the 
potential dangers of being arrested for illegal drugs abroad and the 
type of assistance that U.S. consular officers can and cannot provide. 
This booklet is free from the Department of State, Consular Affairs/
Public Affairs Staff, Room 6831, Washington, DC 20520.
    Travel Tips for Older Americans contains basic information on 
passports, currency, health, aid for serious problems, and other useful 
travel tips for senior citizens.
    Your Trip Abroad contains basic information on passports, 
vaccinations, unusual travel requirements, dual nationality, drugs, 
modes of travel, customs, legal requirements, and many other topics for 
the American tourist, business representative, or student traveling 
overseas.
    A Safe Trip Abroad contains helpful precautions to minimize one's 
chances of becoming a victim of terrorism and also provides other safety 
tips.
    Tips for Americans Residing Abroad contains advice for almost 4 
million Americans living in foreign countries. These publications cost 
between $1.25 and $1.75 each.
    Regional Tips for Travelers cover customs, currency regulations, 
dual nationality, and other local conditions. Currently available are 
publications for the following countries/regions: Canada; the Caribbean, 
Central and South America; Mexico; Sub-Saharan Africa; the Middle East 
and North Africa; Russia; China; and South Asia and Korea.
    Foreign Entry Requirements; Passports: Applying for Them the Easy 
Way; Advance Fee Business Scams; Travel Tips for Students; Tips for 
Women Traveling Alone; and Travel Smart/Travel

[[Page 310]]

Safe are available from the Consumer Information Center, Pueblo, CO 
81009 (50 cents each).
Visas  To obtain information on visas for foreigners wishing to enter 
the United States, call 202-663-1225. Internet, www.travel.state.gov.

For further information, contact the Office of Public Communication, 
Public Information Service, Bureau of Public Affairs, Department of 
State, Washington, DC 20520. Phone, 202-647-6575. Internet, 
www.state.gov.