President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia last fall sent a new ambassador to the U.S., a childhood friend who has no diplomatic experience but has substantial international business expertise. Carlos Urrutia was appointed ambassador on September 5, 2012, succeeding Gabriel Silva, who said he resigned after only two years in Washington because he had “fulfilled” his primary mission of achieving ratification of the U.S.-Colombia free trade agreement. Urrutia formally presented his credentials to President Barack Obama on September 19, 2012.
Born circa 1950, Carlos Urrutia-Valenzuela was one of three children born to a wealthy and prominent Bogotá family, son of Carlos Urrutia Holguín and Maria Teresa Valenzuela. Urrutia graduated high school in the U.S. in 1968 and began his undergraduate studies at Johns Hopkins University from 1968 to 1970, returning to Colombia to finish his law degree at the Universidad de los Andes in 1974.
Urrutia worked in the public sector from 1975 to 1977, first as secretary general of the Governorship of the Department of Cundinamarca until January 1977, and as secretary of finance of Cundinamarca from February 1977 to April 1977.
Urrutia spent his legal career at his father’s Bogotá firm of Brigard & Urrutia, the oldest law firm in Colombia, from May 1977 to 2012. He was made a partner in 1981, and was managing partner from 1999 to 2012. During his 35-year career there, Urrutia advised clients on commercial law, commercial transactions, energy projects, international financial transactions, litigation and arbitration.
Despite Urrutia’s lack of diplomatic experience, Santos has insisted that his childhood friend is a man “who has all the qualities to represent our country at this special moment” in its relations with the U.S. The closest Urrutia can come to claiming such experience rests on the fact that his uncle, Francisco Urrutia Holguín, was ambassador to neighboring Venezuela in the early 1950s and ambassador to the United Nations between 1953 and 1957.
A wealthy man who has his clothes tailored in London, Urrutia showed his support for Santos’ 2010 presidential run even before the campaign began. In February 2010 Urrutia organized a fundraiser at the elite Bogotá Club San Andrés, to which the price of admission was between 600,000 and 1,200,000 pesos per person ($310-$620) and 8 million pesos ($4,133) per company.
Urrutia is a panel member on the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes’panel of arbitrators. He has also been a member of several boards of directors of Colombian companies, including Allianz Colseguros S.A.; Ladrillera Santafe S.A.; 3M Colombia S.A.; Leo Burnett Colombia S.A.; Dividendo por Colombia, a Colombian non-profit affiliated with United Way; and Cámara de Comercio Colombo Francesa (French-Colombian Chamber of Commerce).
An associate member of the American Bar Association and International Bar Association, in addition to his native Spanish, Urrutia speaks fluent English and French.
Urrutia is married to Leonor de Urrutia Restrepo, known in the jet set as “Nany Urrutia,” with whom he has two children, including Carlos, a lawyer and economist who works directly for President Santos.
-Matt Bewig
Santos le confía a uno de sus mejores amigos las relaciones con Estados Unidos (by Martha Maya, La Silla Vacía)
The fifth largest US trading partner and the largest recipient of US aid in the Western Hemisphere, Colombia has a unique and close relationship with the United States. Its highest monetary value exports to the US are oil and coal, coffee and cocaine, and flowers. Just north of the Equator, Colombia is a beautiful country of varied ecologies, from Pacific beaches, Andean peaks of 18,000 ft, mountain plateaus and valleys, to the jungles of the Caribbean coast and Amazon Basin. Besieged by wealthy drug cartels with private armies, other paramilitaries and a large leftist insurgency in the 1990s, some called Colombia a failed state. Plan Colombia, begun in 2000 under President Clinton and continued under President Bush, has brought more than $5Billion in US aid to Colombia, mostly but not exclusively to the police and army. Intended to cut drug production and restore the national government’s control of the country over other armed groups, the success of Plan Colombia continues to be debated But, this decade has seen increased stability and economic growth, reduced violence and weakening of armed opposition in Colombia.
Lay of the Land: Colombia occupies the northwest corner of South America. In Colombia the Andes separate into three principal ranges. The central range is the highest, with snowcapped volcanoes 18,000 feet high. These three ranges (or cordilleras) have encouraged regionalism and have made communications within the country slow and difficult. They also account for the more or less parallel development of several urban centers–an oddity in Latin American countries, where almost invariably a single vast metropolitan area dominates the national political, economic, and cultural life.
Spain discovered Colombia in the early 1500s and established its first settlement at Santa Marta in 1525. In 1717, the Viceroyalty of New Granada (Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, and Panama) declared Santa Marta, now Bogotá, as the capital of the region. Almost a century later, intense conflict over the intended power of the central government divided the people into federalists and centralists, causing a period of instability.
Until the Cold War and the rapid expansion of the cocaine trade, the US government had little direct role in Colombian affairs, with one exception. In November 1903, encouraged by President Theodore Roosevelt and supported by the US Navy, Panama declared its independence from Colombia. In two weeks, the US signed a treaty with the new government of Panama ceding the Panama Canal Zone to the US.
Noted Colombian-Americans:
Legal imports from Colombia totaled $13.1billion in 2008, the fourth largest in Latin America after Mexico, Venezuela and Brazil. Within the time frame of 2004 to 2008, crude oil has increased from $2.6 billion to $5.9 billion, coal from $595 million to $1.7billion, coffee from $386 to $805 million and nursery stock/cut flowers $421 million to $516 million. Although estimates of the value of illegal drug imports are notoriously variable, using 2006 smuggling data from the Office of National Drug Control Policy and 2006 pricing data from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, one can calculate (see below) cocaine imports from Colombia valued at $983 million in Colombian wholesale prices. Colombia is also a significant producer and supplier to the US market of opiates and marijuana.
U.S. and Colombia Agree to Allow Access to Colombian Military Bases
Major sources of human rights violations spawn from illegal groups such as terrorist organizations. According to the Department of State, they are responsible for unlawful acts such as “political killings and kidnappings; physical violence; forced displacement; subornation and intimidation of judges, prosecutors, and witnesses; infringement on citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedom of movement; recruitment and use of child soldiers; and harassment, intimidation, and killings of human rights workers, journalists, teachers, and trade unionists.” Because of political tensions and military groups, political killings are still problematic.
Should the Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement be Ratified?
The Ambassador proceeding Brownfield from 2003 to 2007 was William B. Wood, a thirty-year Foreign Service veteran with previous diplomatic postings in Europe and Latin America. Preceding his service in Colombia, he was Acting Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of International Organization Affairs from 1998 to 2002, with responsibility for US policy toward the United Nations and other multilateral organizations. From Colombia, Wood moved on to become Ambassador to Afghanistan.
Luis Carlos Villegas presented his credentials as Colombia’s ambassador to the United States to President Barack Obama on December 3, 2013. It’s Villegas’ first ambassadorial post, but not the businessman’s first foray into foreign affairs.
Villegas was born in Pereira, Colombia. He attended Universidad Javeriana in Bogota, earning a bachelor’s degree in socioeconomics in 1978. Shortly after graduation, Villegas began work as the private secretary to Colombia’s minister of development. A few months later, upon a change in government, Villegas was sent to Paris to serve as economic counselor in his country’s embassy to France. While there, he earned a master’s degree in public administration from the University of Paris.
In 1980, Villegas came home to serve as undersecretary for economic and social affairs in the Colombian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was named secretary general of the ministry in 1984 and used his position to blast U.S. President Ronald Reagan for inaction on the Latin American debt crisis.
Villegas was appointed governor of his native Risaralda department (state) in 1985. The following year, he was named secretary general of the National Federation of Coffee Growers. But in 1987 he returned to the foreign ministry as deputy minister, serving in that post until 1989.
Villegas entered politics at that point, becoming international secretary of Colombia’s Liberal Party. He served two years as senator from Risaralda beginning in 1990.
In 1992, Villegas returned to business, becoming president of Corfioccidente, a financial services company, remaining in that position for three years. Villegas was made president of the National Business Association of Colombia (ANDI) in 1996, remaining in that position until being named ambassador.
He took on other jobs during that period. In 1999, he was reconstruction coordinator in the wake of a major earthquake that hit Colombia’s coffee-growing region. Later, he was instrumental in negotiations with FARC, the rebel army that had taken over much of Colombia’s interior. He did this despite FARC’s kidnapping of his daughter Juliana in 2000 from his alma mater, Javeriana, where she was studying political science. She was held three months before being released unharmed in March 2001 and later worked as a political consultant.
In addition to Juliana, Villegas and his wife, Carmela Restrepo, have a son, Daniel.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
On April 1, 2014, the U.S. Senate confirmed the nomination of career Foreign Service officer Kevin Whitaker as ambassador to Colombia. Whitaker had been nominated for the post by President Barack Obama on September 19, 2013. He was sworn in on April 28.
The son of a career Army officer, Lt. Col. Malvern Whitaker, Kevin Whitaker attended the University of Virginia, graduating with a B.A. in 1979.
Whitaker joined the Foreign Service right out of college, beginning with a tour in London. Most of his experience has been in Latin America. His early assignments included serving as desk officer for El Salvador and France, as well as working as political officer in Jamaica and Honduras.
From 2002 to 2005, Whitaker headed the Cuban Affairs Desk for the State Department. During a visit to Havana in December 2002, he met with dissidents and was expelled by Fidel Castro’s government.
In 2005, he was named deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Venezuela, another country with which the administration of President George W. Bush was at odds. Whitaker served there until 2007. At that point, he moved back to Washington to take a post as deputy executive secretary in the Office of the Secretary of State. In 2008, he was named director of the Office of Andean Affairs in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs.
In 2011, he was named deputy assistant secretary of state for South America in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs.
Whitaker created some controversy with a statement he made during his nomination hearing. The Colombian government fired the Bogotá mayor, and Whitaker told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in response to a question that the firing could endanger peace talks between the Colombian government and FARC rebels. Some Colombians took offense, saying Whitaker was interfering in their country’s internal affairs.
Whitaker‘s wife, Elizabeth Whitaker, also worked in the State Department before moving to the private sector in 2008. They have three sons, Stuart, Thomas and Daniel.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
morePeter Michael McKinley served as the United States Ambassador to Peru from June 28, 2007, until 2010. On August 5, 2010, he took over as ambassador to Colombia.
President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia last fall sent a new ambassador to the U.S., a childhood friend who has no diplomatic experience but has substantial international business expertise. Carlos Urrutia was appointed ambassador on September 5, 2012, succeeding Gabriel Silva, who said he resigned after only two years in Washington because he had “fulfilled” his primary mission of achieving ratification of the U.S.-Colombia free trade agreement. Urrutia formally presented his credentials to President Barack Obama on September 19, 2012.
Born circa 1950, Carlos Urrutia-Valenzuela was one of three children born to a wealthy and prominent Bogotá family, son of Carlos Urrutia Holguín and Maria Teresa Valenzuela. Urrutia graduated high school in the U.S. in 1968 and began his undergraduate studies at Johns Hopkins University from 1968 to 1970, returning to Colombia to finish his law degree at the Universidad de los Andes in 1974.
Urrutia worked in the public sector from 1975 to 1977, first as secretary general of the Governorship of the Department of Cundinamarca until January 1977, and as secretary of finance of Cundinamarca from February 1977 to April 1977.
Urrutia spent his legal career at his father’s Bogotá firm of Brigard & Urrutia, the oldest law firm in Colombia, from May 1977 to 2012. He was made a partner in 1981, and was managing partner from 1999 to 2012. During his 35-year career there, Urrutia advised clients on commercial law, commercial transactions, energy projects, international financial transactions, litigation and arbitration.
Despite Urrutia’s lack of diplomatic experience, Santos has insisted that his childhood friend is a man “who has all the qualities to represent our country at this special moment” in its relations with the U.S. The closest Urrutia can come to claiming such experience rests on the fact that his uncle, Francisco Urrutia Holguín, was ambassador to neighboring Venezuela in the early 1950s and ambassador to the United Nations between 1953 and 1957.
A wealthy man who has his clothes tailored in London, Urrutia showed his support for Santos’ 2010 presidential run even before the campaign began. In February 2010 Urrutia organized a fundraiser at the elite Bogotá Club San Andrés, to which the price of admission was between 600,000 and 1,200,000 pesos per person ($310-$620) and 8 million pesos ($4,133) per company.
Urrutia is a panel member on the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes’panel of arbitrators. He has also been a member of several boards of directors of Colombian companies, including Allianz Colseguros S.A.; Ladrillera Santafe S.A.; 3M Colombia S.A.; Leo Burnett Colombia S.A.; Dividendo por Colombia, a Colombian non-profit affiliated with United Way; and Cámara de Comercio Colombo Francesa (French-Colombian Chamber of Commerce).
An associate member of the American Bar Association and International Bar Association, in addition to his native Spanish, Urrutia speaks fluent English and French.
Urrutia is married to Leonor de Urrutia Restrepo, known in the jet set as “Nany Urrutia,” with whom he has two children, including Carlos, a lawyer and economist who works directly for President Santos.
-Matt Bewig
Santos le confía a uno de sus mejores amigos las relaciones con Estados Unidos (by Martha Maya, La Silla Vacía)
The fifth largest US trading partner and the largest recipient of US aid in the Western Hemisphere, Colombia has a unique and close relationship with the United States. Its highest monetary value exports to the US are oil and coal, coffee and cocaine, and flowers. Just north of the Equator, Colombia is a beautiful country of varied ecologies, from Pacific beaches, Andean peaks of 18,000 ft, mountain plateaus and valleys, to the jungles of the Caribbean coast and Amazon Basin. Besieged by wealthy drug cartels with private armies, other paramilitaries and a large leftist insurgency in the 1990s, some called Colombia a failed state. Plan Colombia, begun in 2000 under President Clinton and continued under President Bush, has brought more than $5Billion in US aid to Colombia, mostly but not exclusively to the police and army. Intended to cut drug production and restore the national government’s control of the country over other armed groups, the success of Plan Colombia continues to be debated But, this decade has seen increased stability and economic growth, reduced violence and weakening of armed opposition in Colombia.
Lay of the Land: Colombia occupies the northwest corner of South America. In Colombia the Andes separate into three principal ranges. The central range is the highest, with snowcapped volcanoes 18,000 feet high. These three ranges (or cordilleras) have encouraged regionalism and have made communications within the country slow and difficult. They also account for the more or less parallel development of several urban centers–an oddity in Latin American countries, where almost invariably a single vast metropolitan area dominates the national political, economic, and cultural life.
Spain discovered Colombia in the early 1500s and established its first settlement at Santa Marta in 1525. In 1717, the Viceroyalty of New Granada (Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, and Panama) declared Santa Marta, now Bogotá, as the capital of the region. Almost a century later, intense conflict over the intended power of the central government divided the people into federalists and centralists, causing a period of instability.
Until the Cold War and the rapid expansion of the cocaine trade, the US government had little direct role in Colombian affairs, with one exception. In November 1903, encouraged by President Theodore Roosevelt and supported by the US Navy, Panama declared its independence from Colombia. In two weeks, the US signed a treaty with the new government of Panama ceding the Panama Canal Zone to the US.
Noted Colombian-Americans:
Legal imports from Colombia totaled $13.1billion in 2008, the fourth largest in Latin America after Mexico, Venezuela and Brazil. Within the time frame of 2004 to 2008, crude oil has increased from $2.6 billion to $5.9 billion, coal from $595 million to $1.7billion, coffee from $386 to $805 million and nursery stock/cut flowers $421 million to $516 million. Although estimates of the value of illegal drug imports are notoriously variable, using 2006 smuggling data from the Office of National Drug Control Policy and 2006 pricing data from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, one can calculate (see below) cocaine imports from Colombia valued at $983 million in Colombian wholesale prices. Colombia is also a significant producer and supplier to the US market of opiates and marijuana.
U.S. and Colombia Agree to Allow Access to Colombian Military Bases
Major sources of human rights violations spawn from illegal groups such as terrorist organizations. According to the Department of State, they are responsible for unlawful acts such as “political killings and kidnappings; physical violence; forced displacement; subornation and intimidation of judges, prosecutors, and witnesses; infringement on citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedom of movement; recruitment and use of child soldiers; and harassment, intimidation, and killings of human rights workers, journalists, teachers, and trade unionists.” Because of political tensions and military groups, political killings are still problematic.
Should the Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement be Ratified?
The Ambassador proceeding Brownfield from 2003 to 2007 was William B. Wood, a thirty-year Foreign Service veteran with previous diplomatic postings in Europe and Latin America. Preceding his service in Colombia, he was Acting Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of International Organization Affairs from 1998 to 2002, with responsibility for US policy toward the United Nations and other multilateral organizations. From Colombia, Wood moved on to become Ambassador to Afghanistan.
Luis Carlos Villegas presented his credentials as Colombia’s ambassador to the United States to President Barack Obama on December 3, 2013. It’s Villegas’ first ambassadorial post, but not the businessman’s first foray into foreign affairs.
Villegas was born in Pereira, Colombia. He attended Universidad Javeriana in Bogota, earning a bachelor’s degree in socioeconomics in 1978. Shortly after graduation, Villegas began work as the private secretary to Colombia’s minister of development. A few months later, upon a change in government, Villegas was sent to Paris to serve as economic counselor in his country’s embassy to France. While there, he earned a master’s degree in public administration from the University of Paris.
In 1980, Villegas came home to serve as undersecretary for economic and social affairs in the Colombian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was named secretary general of the ministry in 1984 and used his position to blast U.S. President Ronald Reagan for inaction on the Latin American debt crisis.
Villegas was appointed governor of his native Risaralda department (state) in 1985. The following year, he was named secretary general of the National Federation of Coffee Growers. But in 1987 he returned to the foreign ministry as deputy minister, serving in that post until 1989.
Villegas entered politics at that point, becoming international secretary of Colombia’s Liberal Party. He served two years as senator from Risaralda beginning in 1990.
In 1992, Villegas returned to business, becoming president of Corfioccidente, a financial services company, remaining in that position for three years. Villegas was made president of the National Business Association of Colombia (ANDI) in 1996, remaining in that position until being named ambassador.
He took on other jobs during that period. In 1999, he was reconstruction coordinator in the wake of a major earthquake that hit Colombia’s coffee-growing region. Later, he was instrumental in negotiations with FARC, the rebel army that had taken over much of Colombia’s interior. He did this despite FARC’s kidnapping of his daughter Juliana in 2000 from his alma mater, Javeriana, where she was studying political science. She was held three months before being released unharmed in March 2001 and later worked as a political consultant.
In addition to Juliana, Villegas and his wife, Carmela Restrepo, have a son, Daniel.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
On April 1, 2014, the U.S. Senate confirmed the nomination of career Foreign Service officer Kevin Whitaker as ambassador to Colombia. Whitaker had been nominated for the post by President Barack Obama on September 19, 2013. He was sworn in on April 28.
The son of a career Army officer, Lt. Col. Malvern Whitaker, Kevin Whitaker attended the University of Virginia, graduating with a B.A. in 1979.
Whitaker joined the Foreign Service right out of college, beginning with a tour in London. Most of his experience has been in Latin America. His early assignments included serving as desk officer for El Salvador and France, as well as working as political officer in Jamaica and Honduras.
From 2002 to 2005, Whitaker headed the Cuban Affairs Desk for the State Department. During a visit to Havana in December 2002, he met with dissidents and was expelled by Fidel Castro’s government.
In 2005, he was named deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Venezuela, another country with which the administration of President George W. Bush was at odds. Whitaker served there until 2007. At that point, he moved back to Washington to take a post as deputy executive secretary in the Office of the Secretary of State. In 2008, he was named director of the Office of Andean Affairs in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs.
In 2011, he was named deputy assistant secretary of state for South America in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs.
Whitaker created some controversy with a statement he made during his nomination hearing. The Colombian government fired the Bogotá mayor, and Whitaker told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in response to a question that the firing could endanger peace talks between the Colombian government and FARC rebels. Some Colombians took offense, saying Whitaker was interfering in their country’s internal affairs.
Whitaker‘s wife, Elizabeth Whitaker, also worked in the State Department before moving to the private sector in 2008. They have three sons, Stuart, Thomas and Daniel.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
morePeter Michael McKinley served as the United States Ambassador to Peru from June 28, 2007, until 2010. On August 5, 2010, he took over as ambassador to Colombia.
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