Anthony C. E. Quainton Explained

Anthony Quainton
Term Start5:August 16, 1978
Successor3:W. Nathaniel Howell
President3:Ronald Reagan
Office4:United States Ambassador to Nicaragua
Predecessor4:Lawrence A. Pezzullo
Successor4:Harry E. Bergold, Jr.
Term Start4:March 26, 1982
Term End4:May 6, 1984
President4:Ronald Reagan
Office5:3rd Coordinator for Counterterrorism
Term End5:August 1, 1981
Term End3:1987
President5:Jimmy Carter
Predecessor5:Heyward Isham
Successor5:Robert M. Sayre
Office6:United States Ambassador to the Central African Empire
Predecessor6:William N. Dale
Successor6:Goodwin Cooke
Term Start6:February 4, 1976
Term End6:June 9, 1978
President6:Gerald Ford
Predecessor3:Philip J. Griffin
Term Start3:1984
Birth Name:Anthony Cecil Eden Quainton
Office1:3rd Assistant Secretary of State for Diplomatic Security
Birth Place:Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Birth Date:April 4, 1934
Death Date:July 31, 2023
Death Place:Washington D.C., U.S.
Office:21st Director General of the Foreign Service
President:Bill Clinton
Term Start:December 29, 1995
Term End:August 22, 1997
Successor:Edward William Gnehm
Predecessor:Genta Hawkins Holmes
Term Start1:September 23, 1992
Office3:United States Ambassador to Kuwait
Term End1:December 29, 1995
Predecessor1:Sheldon J. Krys
Successor1:Eric J. Boswell
President1:George H. W. Bush
Office2:United States Ambassador to Peru
Term Start2:December 11, 1989
Term End2:September 16, 1992
Predecessor2:Alexander Fletcher Watson
Successor2:Charles H. Brayshaw
President2:George H. W. Bush
Education:Princeton University (BA)
University of Oxford (BLitt)

Anthony Cecil Eden Quainton (April 4, 1934 – July 31, 2023[1]) was an American diplomat who served as the United States ambassador to the Central African Empire, Nicaragua, Kuwait, and Peru.[2]

Early life and education

He was born in Seattle and educated at St. Michaels University School in Victoria, Canada. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Princeton University and a Bachelor of Literature from Oxford University, where he studied as a Marshall Scholar.

Career

Quainton joined the United States Foreign Service in 1959. As a Foreign Service Officer, he was posted to Sydney 1959–62, to Karachi 1963, to Rawalpindi 1964–66, and to New Delhi 1966–69. He spent 1969–72 at the United States Department of State in Washington, D.C., as the senior political officer for India in the Bureau of Near East and South Asian Affairs. He then spent 1972–73 as a political officer at the U.S. Embassy, Paris. From 1973 through 1976, he was deputy chief of mission in Kathmandu. In 1976, President Gerald Ford nominated Quainton as United States ambassador to the Central African Empire. Ambassador Quainton presented his credentials on February 20, 1976, and held this post until June 9, 1978.

He then became the coordinator for Counterterrorism. During this time, he oversaw the task force in charge of dealing with the 1980 Dominican Republic Embassy siege in Bogotá by M-19 guerrillas.[3] He held this post until 1981 and was then named United States ambassador to Nicaragua by President Ronald Reagan, presenting his credentials on March 26, 1982, and serving there until May 6, 1984. Reagan then appointed Quainton United States ambassador to Kuwait, a post which he held from September 1984 to August 1987. Quainton returned to the United States in September 1987, serving as Deputy inspector general of the Department of State from September 1987 to November 1989.

Newly-inaugurated President George H. W. Bush named Quainton United States ambassador to Peru. He presented his credentials on December 11, 1989, and served until September 16, 1992.

After his tenure in a Peru, Bush then nominated Quainton to be assistant secretary of state for diplomatic security, an office he held from September 23, 1992, until December 29, 1995. President Bill Clinton then named him director general of the Foreign Service which Quainton held from December 29, 1995, to August 22, 1997.

In 1997, Quainton left government service and joined the Una Chapman Cox Foundation. He then became president and CEO of the National Policy Association. Since 2003, he has been the Distinguished Diplomat-in-Residence at the American University School of International Service. He retired in 2019 but continued to teach his signatures courses on diplomatic practice and Peru until 2023.

Personal life

While in England, he married a fellow Marshall Scholar, Susan Long, in 1957. He spent 1958–59 working as a research assistant at St Antony's College, Oxford.

References

Notes and References

  1. https://www.devolfuneralhome.com/obituaries/Anthony-Cecil-Eden-Quainton?obId=28613535
  2. Web site: 6 November 1997 . The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project AMBASSADOR ANTHONY QUAINTON . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240703174104/https://adst.org/OH%20TOCs/Quainton,%20Anthony.toc.pdf . 3 July 2024 . 1 August 2024 . Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training.
  3. The Tampa Tribune, Feb. 29th 1980.