The State Department first had a Department of Latin American Affairs in 1909. The position of Assistant Secretary for Inter-American affairs was created in 1944. Following a reorganization in 1949, Inter-American Affairs attained Bureau status, along with Bureaus for other parts of the world. In 2001, the Bureau was renamed Western Hemisphere Affairs.
BWH operates 51 embassies and consulates in 31 countries in the Western Hemisphere. At these foreign sites, BWH staff act as official representatives of the United States government, with an ‘open door’ (after security check) for US citizens wanting assistance in business and other affairs in the foreign countries, and for foreign citizens wanting assistance in business with US companies or in obtaining entry to the US. Embassy and consular staff also meet with representatives of the host government and of other political and civic groups in the host country, and also with the foreign press to explain US policy and actions. BWH coordinates the delivery of US foreign aid to the host country, and facilitates the activities of other US government agencies, such as the Department of Defense and Drug Enforcement Administration, in the host country. BWH foreign service staff also reports on political events and economic conditions to policy makers in Washington.
Tom Shannon Inherits the Wreckage of the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs (Council on Hemispheric Affairs)
FY 2010 Funds by Program Activity Summary
|
FY 2009
|
FY 2010
|
Increase /
|
|
Estimate
|
Request
|
Decrease
|
Conduct of Diplomatic Relations
|
$80,949
|
$93,946
|
$12,997
|
Counter-Terrorism Programs
|
$1,160
|
$1,945
|
$785
|
Diplomatic Security
|
$14,696
|
$15,441
|
$745
|
Domestic Administrative Support
|
$5,313
|
$5,721
|
$408
|
Information Resource Management
|
$27,246
|
$32,198
|
$4,952
|
Multilateral Diplomacy
|
$4,296
|
$4,642
|
$346
|
Overseas Program Support
|
$115,940
|
$117,383
|
$1,443
|
Policy Formulation
|
$22,109
|
$20,734
|
-$1,375
|
Public Diplomacy
|
$53,510
|
$62,929
|
$9,419
|
Training Services
|
$69
|
$93
|
$24
|
Total
|
$325,288
|
$355,032
|
$29,744
|
Isolation, Regime Change and State Terror
While the causes of the “Pink Tide” lie mostly in the histories and economic conditions of the countries involved, and the long history of unequal economic relations with the US, critics cite
the Bush Administration’s perceived arrogance toward Latin America
, and lack of concern about the impact of opening markets to American exports upon small farmers especially, as counterproductive in maintaining governments favorable to the US and its trade policies. Two issues that put the US and its hemispheric neighbors at odds stand out. First, the US demanded that Latin American governments exempt US officials and military from possible persecution under the International Criminal Court or face a cutoff of US military aid, and temporarily suspended military aid to 14 Latin American countries. Second, despite US persuasion and inducements, most nations in the Western Hemisphere opposed or abstained from the US invasion of Iraq: Mexico and Chile opposed the US/British resolution to endorse military action in the UN Security Council, the regional assembly of Caribbean nations (CARICOM) passed a resolution condemning the invasion, and only 4 countries, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua, all signatories to CAFTA, participated in the “Coalition of the Willing” during the invasion and occupation of Iraq..
Roger Noriega
Roger Noriega was Assistant Secretary from March 2003 to October 2005. Born in 1959 in Wichita, Kansas, he received a B.A. from Washburn University in Topeka. After 2 years as staff to Congressman Bob Whittaker (R-Kansas), he worked for the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs from 1986 through 1994, including a year as Alternative US Representative to the OAS. Noriega returned to Capital Hill from 1994 to 2000, becoming senior staff to Jesse Helms, the conservative chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He was US Permanent Representative to the OAS from 2001 to 2003, before becoming Assistant Secretary. Noriega is now a fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
There have been 28 Secretaries of first Inter-American then Western Hemisphere Affairs from 1944 to 1947 and 1949 to the present. The first (1944-5) was Nelson Rockefeller, later Governor of New York and Vice-President of the United States.
From May 5, 2016 to January 20, 2017, when Donald Trump took over the presidency of the United States, the nation’s top diplomat for relations with other Western Hemisphere nations was Mari Del Carmen Aponte, who received a recess appointment from President Barack Obama to head the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs.
Born in 1946 and raised in the Santurce district of San Juan, Puerto Rico, Aponte earned a B.A. in Political Science at Rosemont College in 1968, an M.A. in Theater at Villanova University in 1970, and a J.D. at Temple University in 1975. In the years between her M.A. and J.D., Aponte taught school in a predominantly Puerto Rican neighborhood in Camden, New Jersey, where, in 1972, students seized control of their school as part of a protest demanding more relevant educational opportunities. Sparked by the student protesters and inspired by Latino lawyer-activist Nelson Diaz, who eventually became a state judge and general counsel at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Aponte decided to go to law school.
Aponte served as a White House fellow from 1979 to 1980, assigned to the Department of Housing and Urban, where she worked as special assistant to Housing and Urban Development Secretary Moon Landrieu. When Jimmy Carter was replaced as president by Ronald Reagan in 1981, Aponte left government for the private sector. She practiced law for the next 20 years in Washington D.C. and New York. She was an associate at Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy and a partner at Alexander, Gebhardt, Aponte & Marks.
In 1998, President Bill Clinton nominated Aponte to be ambassador to the Dominican Republic, but Republicans used rumors that she had been recruited by Cuban intelligence to kill the nomination. In actual fact, from 1982 to 1994 Aponte had dated a Cuban-born insurance salesman named Roberto Tamayo, who was alleged to be working for Cuba, but may have been working for the U.S. The FBI reviewed the matter, eventually clearing Aponte of any wrongdoing and giving her a high-level security clearance.
After the withdrawal of the ambassadorial nomination, Clinton made Aponte a special assistant in the Office of Presidential Personnel, where she had volunteered during 1993.
From 2001-2004, Aponte served as executive director of the Puerto Rican Federal Affairs Administration, representing the governor of Puerto Rico on all matters to state and federal agencies, as well as to Congress and the Executive Branch. Aponte ran a consulting business, Aponte Consulting, and worked as a strategic consultant to the Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network (HITN) in New York.
President Obama nominated Aponte to be ambassador to El Salvador on December 9, 2009, and she was confirmed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee April 27, 2010. However, Republicans resurrected the debunked Tamayo rumors and put a hold on her nomination, so Obama gave her a recess appointment on August 19, 2010. Aponte had to leave El Salvador at the end of December 2011 when her recess stint expired—but then the Senate reversed course in June 2012 by finally confirming her nomination. Aponte returned to El Salvador in June 2012, serving as ambassador until January 2016.
Aponte caused a stir in El Salvador in 2011 when, in response to a general State Department initiative to support gay rights, she wrote an opinion piece in a local newspaper stating, “No one should be subjected to aggression because of who he is or who he loves. Homophobia and brutal hostility are often based on lack of understanding about what it truly means to be gay or transgender. To avoid negative perceptions, we must work together with education and support for those facing those who promote hatred.”
In July 2014, Obama nominated Aponte to be the next U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States, but Republicans in the Senate blocked the appointment. In 2016, Obama gave her a recess appointment to the Western Hemisphere job.
Aponte has served as a member of the board of directors of the Oriental Financial Group (1998-2001), the National Council of La Raza and the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund (now known as Latino Justice). She has been a member of the boards of the University of the District of Columbia and Rosemont College, and a member of the District of Columbia Judicial Nominations Commission. She has served as president of the Hispanic National Bar Association and the Hispanic Bar Association of the District of Columbia. She has never married and has no children.
-Matt Bewig, Noel Brinkerhoff
To Learn More
Interview with Ernesto Londoño of The New York Times (Spanish audio)
American Bar Association Biography
The Ghosts of Boyfriends Past (by Gail Collins, New York Times)
Ambassador Mari Carmen Aponte: Latina Blazes a Trail in Diplomacy (by Patricia Guadalupe, NBC News)
Senators Grill Obama Nominee Mari Carmen Aponte’s Ties to Cuban Officials (by Gautham Nagesh, Daily Caller)
State Department Cables and Related Emails (WikiLeaks)
Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs: Who Is Roberta Jacobson?
The State Department first had a Department of Latin American Affairs in 1909. The position of Assistant Secretary for Inter-American affairs was created in 1944. Following a reorganization in 1949, Inter-American Affairs attained Bureau status, along with Bureaus for other parts of the world. In 2001, the Bureau was renamed Western Hemisphere Affairs.
BWH operates 51 embassies and consulates in 31 countries in the Western Hemisphere. At these foreign sites, BWH staff act as official representatives of the United States government, with an ‘open door’ (after security check) for US citizens wanting assistance in business and other affairs in the foreign countries, and for foreign citizens wanting assistance in business with US companies or in obtaining entry to the US. Embassy and consular staff also meet with representatives of the host government and of other political and civic groups in the host country, and also with the foreign press to explain US policy and actions. BWH coordinates the delivery of US foreign aid to the host country, and facilitates the activities of other US government agencies, such as the Department of Defense and Drug Enforcement Administration, in the host country. BWH foreign service staff also reports on political events and economic conditions to policy makers in Washington.
Tom Shannon Inherits the Wreckage of the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs (Council on Hemispheric Affairs)
FY 2010 Funds by Program Activity Summary
|
FY 2009
|
FY 2010
|
Increase /
|
|
Estimate
|
Request
|
Decrease
|
Conduct of Diplomatic Relations
|
$80,949
|
$93,946
|
$12,997
|
Counter-Terrorism Programs
|
$1,160
|
$1,945
|
$785
|
Diplomatic Security
|
$14,696
|
$15,441
|
$745
|
Domestic Administrative Support
|
$5,313
|
$5,721
|
$408
|
Information Resource Management
|
$27,246
|
$32,198
|
$4,952
|
Multilateral Diplomacy
|
$4,296
|
$4,642
|
$346
|
Overseas Program Support
|
$115,940
|
$117,383
|
$1,443
|
Policy Formulation
|
$22,109
|
$20,734
|
-$1,375
|
Public Diplomacy
|
$53,510
|
$62,929
|
$9,419
|
Training Services
|
$69
|
$93
|
$24
|
Total
|
$325,288
|
$355,032
|
$29,744
|
Isolation, Regime Change and State Terror
While the causes of the “Pink Tide” lie mostly in the histories and economic conditions of the countries involved, and the long history of unequal economic relations with the US, critics cite
the Bush Administration’s perceived arrogance toward Latin America
, and lack of concern about the impact of opening markets to American exports upon small farmers especially, as counterproductive in maintaining governments favorable to the US and its trade policies. Two issues that put the US and its hemispheric neighbors at odds stand out. First, the US demanded that Latin American governments exempt US officials and military from possible persecution under the International Criminal Court or face a cutoff of US military aid, and temporarily suspended military aid to 14 Latin American countries. Second, despite US persuasion and inducements, most nations in the Western Hemisphere opposed or abstained from the US invasion of Iraq: Mexico and Chile opposed the US/British resolution to endorse military action in the UN Security Council, the regional assembly of Caribbean nations (CARICOM) passed a resolution condemning the invasion, and only 4 countries, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua, all signatories to CAFTA, participated in the “Coalition of the Willing” during the invasion and occupation of Iraq..
Roger Noriega
Roger Noriega was Assistant Secretary from March 2003 to October 2005. Born in 1959 in Wichita, Kansas, he received a B.A. from Washburn University in Topeka. After 2 years as staff to Congressman Bob Whittaker (R-Kansas), he worked for the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs from 1986 through 1994, including a year as Alternative US Representative to the OAS. Noriega returned to Capital Hill from 1994 to 2000, becoming senior staff to Jesse Helms, the conservative chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He was US Permanent Representative to the OAS from 2001 to 2003, before becoming Assistant Secretary. Noriega is now a fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
There have been 28 Secretaries of first Inter-American then Western Hemisphere Affairs from 1944 to 1947 and 1949 to the present. The first (1944-5) was Nelson Rockefeller, later Governor of New York and Vice-President of the United States.
From May 5, 2016 to January 20, 2017, when Donald Trump took over the presidency of the United States, the nation’s top diplomat for relations with other Western Hemisphere nations was Mari Del Carmen Aponte, who received a recess appointment from President Barack Obama to head the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs.
Born in 1946 and raised in the Santurce district of San Juan, Puerto Rico, Aponte earned a B.A. in Political Science at Rosemont College in 1968, an M.A. in Theater at Villanova University in 1970, and a J.D. at Temple University in 1975. In the years between her M.A. and J.D., Aponte taught school in a predominantly Puerto Rican neighborhood in Camden, New Jersey, where, in 1972, students seized control of their school as part of a protest demanding more relevant educational opportunities. Sparked by the student protesters and inspired by Latino lawyer-activist Nelson Diaz, who eventually became a state judge and general counsel at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Aponte decided to go to law school.
Aponte served as a White House fellow from 1979 to 1980, assigned to the Department of Housing and Urban, where she worked as special assistant to Housing and Urban Development Secretary Moon Landrieu. When Jimmy Carter was replaced as president by Ronald Reagan in 1981, Aponte left government for the private sector. She practiced law for the next 20 years in Washington D.C. and New York. She was an associate at Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy and a partner at Alexander, Gebhardt, Aponte & Marks.
In 1998, President Bill Clinton nominated Aponte to be ambassador to the Dominican Republic, but Republicans used rumors that she had been recruited by Cuban intelligence to kill the nomination. In actual fact, from 1982 to 1994 Aponte had dated a Cuban-born insurance salesman named Roberto Tamayo, who was alleged to be working for Cuba, but may have been working for the U.S. The FBI reviewed the matter, eventually clearing Aponte of any wrongdoing and giving her a high-level security clearance.
After the withdrawal of the ambassadorial nomination, Clinton made Aponte a special assistant in the Office of Presidential Personnel, where she had volunteered during 1993.
From 2001-2004, Aponte served as executive director of the Puerto Rican Federal Affairs Administration, representing the governor of Puerto Rico on all matters to state and federal agencies, as well as to Congress and the Executive Branch. Aponte ran a consulting business, Aponte Consulting, and worked as a strategic consultant to the Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network (HITN) in New York.
President Obama nominated Aponte to be ambassador to El Salvador on December 9, 2009, and she was confirmed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee April 27, 2010. However, Republicans resurrected the debunked Tamayo rumors and put a hold on her nomination, so Obama gave her a recess appointment on August 19, 2010. Aponte had to leave El Salvador at the end of December 2011 when her recess stint expired—but then the Senate reversed course in June 2012 by finally confirming her nomination. Aponte returned to El Salvador in June 2012, serving as ambassador until January 2016.
Aponte caused a stir in El Salvador in 2011 when, in response to a general State Department initiative to support gay rights, she wrote an opinion piece in a local newspaper stating, “No one should be subjected to aggression because of who he is or who he loves. Homophobia and brutal hostility are often based on lack of understanding about what it truly means to be gay or transgender. To avoid negative perceptions, we must work together with education and support for those facing those who promote hatred.”
In July 2014, Obama nominated Aponte to be the next U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States, but Republicans in the Senate blocked the appointment. In 2016, Obama gave her a recess appointment to the Western Hemisphere job.
Aponte has served as a member of the board of directors of the Oriental Financial Group (1998-2001), the National Council of La Raza and the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund (now known as Latino Justice). She has been a member of the boards of the University of the District of Columbia and Rosemont College, and a member of the District of Columbia Judicial Nominations Commission. She has served as president of the Hispanic National Bar Association and the Hispanic Bar Association of the District of Columbia. She has never married and has no children.
-Matt Bewig, Noel Brinkerhoff
To Learn More
Interview with Ernesto Londoño of The New York Times (Spanish audio)
American Bar Association Biography
The Ghosts of Boyfriends Past (by Gail Collins, New York Times)
Ambassador Mari Carmen Aponte: Latina Blazes a Trail in Diplomacy (by Patricia Guadalupe, NBC News)
Senators Grill Obama Nominee Mari Carmen Aponte’s Ties to Cuban Officials (by Gautham Nagesh, Daily Caller)
State Department Cables and Related Emails (WikiLeaks)
Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs: Who Is Roberta Jacobson?
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