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Bush Advisor Becomes First US Envoy to AU

 
     
     
 
 















 

 
 

On the same day that the balance of power in the US foreign policy establishment was flung into question with the surprising resignation of Donald Rumsfeld as Secretary of Defence, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice swore-in Ambassador Cindy Courville as the first US envoy to the African Union (AU). She will be based in Addis Abeba on the same premises as the US mission to Ethiopia on Algeria Street.
 

More than 200 diplomats, friends and family members joined Secretary Rice at the November 8 swearing-in for Courville at the State Department in Washington DC. National Security Council (NSC) Advisor Stephen Hadley also attended.

 

Courville was President Bush’s top Africa adviser on the NSC before being named to the new diplomatic posting.  Before that, she taught political science at several universities and served for a number of years as an Africa analyst for the Defense Intelligence Agency.

 

Rice, who attended the University of Denver with Courville, called the new ambassador “the ideal candidate” to represent America to the increasingly important AU, lately called upon to furnish peacekeeping troops to crisis areas such as Darfur in Sudan.

 

Courville’s knowledge and understanding of conflict issues, as well as the continent’s development needs, are a good match for the ongoing spirit of “partnership” and cooperation that characterizes U.S.-African relations, Rice said.  And since “the AU has been one of our very important partners…,” she said, “the evolution of that relationship takes a natural turn today with the appointment” of Courville.

 

“The United States has worked effectively with the African Union … to bring Africans together” to work on critical issues such as “the terrible tragedy in Darfur,” Rice said.  And Courville will be a key participant, she added, “as we continue to work together to build strong strategic relationships throughout the continent.”

 

Courville said, “It is the African ambassadors, that corps, who supported me also, and I hope will continue to be part of the American-African dream to build upon that partnership and build upon the promise of freedom and prosperity that President Bush sees on the continent.”

 

To the AU representatives, she said: “I look forward to being on the continent.  I look forward to the challenges — and I know they are going to be tough.  But I know there is a vision” for the future and that “you will allow the United States to participate in that partnership … and I know there will be nothing less than success.”

(Compiled from a Press Release by a FORTUNE Staff Writer)

 
 

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