One of the “lands of the midnight sun,” during its long history Norway has given the world the adventurous spirit of the Vikings, the plays of Henrik Ibsen and a humane model of domestic and foreign policy. Human settlement in what is considered present-day Norway dates back approximately 10,000 years to the Paleolithic era. Most notablly, the Viking Age from 800 to 1066 saw the expansion of Norwegian travel by raiders, explorers, traders, and settlers, as well as the establishment of the Norwegian kingdom. The Black Death killed half of Norway’s population in 1349, which plunged the country into a period of social, political, and economic decline. Norway had a period of alliance with Denmark and then Sweden, but established its autonomy in 1905. Since then, Norway has claimed neutrality in both World Wars. In the last century, Norway established itself as a prosperous nation with a booming economy supplied by the discovery of petroleum and natural gas.
Lay of the Land: Located on the western third of the Scandinavian Peninsula in northern Europe, the mountainous nation of Norway sits about 600 feet higher than Europe as a whole. Norway is bordered by the North Sea to the south, the Norwegian Sea and Atlantic Ocean to the west, the Berents Sea to the North, and Russia, Finland, and Sweden to the east. The northernmost part of the country extends into the Arctic Circle, while the border with Sweden runs along the Scandinavian mountains, with the highest peak having an elevation of 8,100 feet. Norway’s coastline is slashed with countless fjords, which have long provided excellent harbors for this traditionally seafaring people. With an area of 148,746 square miles, Norway is about the same size as Montana. Approximately 66% of Norway is tundra, glacier, rock or snowfields, 25% is forested, and only 3 to 4% is arable. Norway’s climate is not as cold as its latitude suggests, because the North Atlantic Drift brings warm, damp air to the whole country. The capital and largest city of Oslo, which is home to over 800,000 Norwegians, is the third largest city in Scandinavia, after Copenhagen and Stockholm.
Human settlement has been traced back 10,000 years to the Paleolithic age. Archeological evidence has revealed the remains of settlers from Doggerland, an area that is now submerged in the North Sea.
Noted Norwegian-Americans
Norway is one of the most prosperous countries in the world, boasting the second highest GDP per-capita (after Luxembourg) in the world. Norway was ranked first in the world in the UNDP Human Development Index (HDI) for six consecutive years (2001-2006), and came in second in 2007/2008. In 2009, Norway returned to its first-place ranking on the HDI. Norway has achieved its prosperity by means of a mixed economy, featuring a combination of free market activity and substantial government ownership in key industrial sectors, such as the strategic petroleum sector (StatoilHydro), hydroelectric energy production (Statkraft), aluminum production (Norsk Hydro), the largest Norwegian bank (DnB NOR) and telecommunication provider (Telenor). In fact, the government controls 31.6% of publicly-listed companies. Norway is richly endowed with natural resources including petroleum, hydropower, fish, forests, and minerals. Large reserves of petroleum and natural gas were discovered in the 1960s, which has led to continuing prosperity.
Barack Obama Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
Norway is a parliamentary democracy and constitutional monarchy governed by a prime minister, a cabinet, and the 169-seat Storting (parliament), which is elected every four years and cannot be dissolved. Free and fair elections to the multiparty parliament have been held at regular intervals during Norway’s 100 years of independence, with the sole exception of the years of German occupation from 1940 to 1945. Civilian authorities generally maintain effective control of the security forces.
Benson K. Whitney served as the US Ambassador to Norway from November 28, 2005. Until June 20, 2009. He received his BA magna cum laude from Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, and earned his JD from the University of Minnesota Law School in Minneapolis. His father, Wheelock Whitney, Jr., was a classmate of George H.W. Bush at Phillips Andover Academy.
Kåre R. Aas, a veteran of Norway’s foreign ministry, presented his credentials as his nation’s ambassador to the United States to President Barack Obama on September 17, 2013. It’s the second ambassadorial posting for Aas.
Aas was born May 25, 1955. He is from the Tøyen neighborhood in Oslo and is the son of a construction worker. He was initially ticketed for vocational school, but was able to talk his way into a more academic setting. Aas joined the foreign ministry in 1983 and his early years there included postings in Santiago, Chile, and Geneva, Switzerland.
In 1995, Aas was made deputy director in the foreign affairs ministry, and the following year he was sent to Brussels as a minister in Norway’s delegation to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, remaining there until 2001.
Aas returned to Oslo to work in the foreign ministry. In 2003 he was chosen to head the ministry’s security department. In that role, he managed bilateral relationships with the United States, Russia and central Asian republics. From 2005 to 2007, Aas was Norway’s representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency’s board of governors.
In 2008, Aas won his first posting as an ambassador, to Afghanistan. Much of his work there involved seeing that Norway’s funding for school construction was put to good use. Aas returned to Oslo in 2010 to become political director for the foreign ministry. He served in that role until being appointed to the Washington post. The oil business is important to Norway, so Aas’ first trip after coming to the United States was to Houston, where he met with energy company officials.
Norway traditionally provides the Christmas tree for Washington’s Union Station. For his first Christmas in Washington, Aas had the tree decorated with 700 reflectors with an image of “The Scream”, the iconic painting by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. It’s Norwegian custom to have children wear reflectors so they’re able to be seen in the dark.
Aas has four children; three daughters and one son. He makes a point of getting up early to go for a run through the streets of Washington.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Our Man In Washington (by Eivind Saether, Dagens Naeringliv)
President Barack Obama has chosen a strong supporter of his 2008 campaign rival, Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) to be the next ambassador to Norway. Nominated September 10, George Tsunis contributed $50,000 to McCain’s 2008 presidential run before switching parties in 2009 and becoming a major donor to Obama’s 2012 re-election run. Tsunis is the chairman and CEO of Chartwell Hotels, which owns, develops and manages Hilton, Marriott and Intercontinental hotels in Pennsylvania, New York, New Hampshire and Rhode Island, and manages his family’s portfolio of real estate holdings.
Because of his business’s presence in northern Pennsylvania, Tsunis told the National Herald that he has taken advantage of the growth of natural gas fracking by “providing a lot of the picks and shovels for the Marcellus Shale.”
If confirmed by the Senate, Tsunis would succeed Barry B. White, who left Oslo in September after a four-year stint as ambassador.
Tsunis’ father, James Tsunis, along with his cousin Charles, owned coffee shops and then developed the Bonwit Inn on Long Island in 1971, eventually investing in hotels and real estate.
Born in 1968, George James Tsunis earned a BA at New York University in 1989 and a JD at St. John’s University School of Law in 1992.
First bitten by the political bug in the 1980s, Tsunis’s first political work was as an aide to Sen. Alfonse D’Amato (R-New York), who served in the U.S. Senate from 1981 to 1999. In 1993, Tsunis ran a losing campaign as a GOP candidate for the Suffolk County Legislature, and in 1999 he was finance coordinator for Suffolk County Executive Robert Gaffney's re-election campaign.
After registering as a Democrat in November 2009, Tsunis raised at least $500,000 for Obama’s 2012 campaign, and donated $300,000 to Democratic super PACs and $75,800 to the Obama Victory Fund, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. According to state records, Tsunis and his wife, Olga, have given $115,000 to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s 2014 re-election campaign.
As a practicing attorney, Tsunis was a partner at the law firm of Rivkin Radler LLP, which is Long Island’s largest law firm, practicing land use and zoning, real estate, corporate, municipal law and commercial litigation.
Tsunis has engaged in public service over the years, including as a legislative attorney for the New York City Council, special counsel to the Town of Huntington Environmental Open Space Committee, and as counsel to the Dix Hills Water District. He also made a $1.25 million gift to Stony Brook University for the creation of the George and Olga Tsunis Center in Hellenic Studies and The James and Eleni Tsunis Chair in Hellenic Studies, the latter in honor of Tsunis’ parents.
A member of the Archdiocesan Council of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, Tsunis is an archon of the Ecumenical Patriarchate (Order of Saint Andrew)—the highest ecclesiastical honor that can be bestowed upon a layman—and serves on its National Council.
Tsunis’ only foreign policy experience consists of memberships on the Brookings Institution Foreign Policy Leadership Committee and its Metropolitan Leadership Council, as well as on Business Executives for National Security.
George Tsunis has been married to his wife Olga (Antzoulis) since November 2004. They live in Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, with their three children.
-Matt Bewig
To Learn More:
George Tsunis of Cold Spring Harbor nominated to be Ambassador to Norway (by Tom Brune, Newsday)
moreOne of the “lands of the midnight sun,” during its long history Norway has given the world the adventurous spirit of the Vikings, the plays of Henrik Ibsen and a humane model of domestic and foreign policy. Human settlement in what is considered present-day Norway dates back approximately 10,000 years to the Paleolithic era. Most notablly, the Viking Age from 800 to 1066 saw the expansion of Norwegian travel by raiders, explorers, traders, and settlers, as well as the establishment of the Norwegian kingdom. The Black Death killed half of Norway’s population in 1349, which plunged the country into a period of social, political, and economic decline. Norway had a period of alliance with Denmark and then Sweden, but established its autonomy in 1905. Since then, Norway has claimed neutrality in both World Wars. In the last century, Norway established itself as a prosperous nation with a booming economy supplied by the discovery of petroleum and natural gas.
Lay of the Land: Located on the western third of the Scandinavian Peninsula in northern Europe, the mountainous nation of Norway sits about 600 feet higher than Europe as a whole. Norway is bordered by the North Sea to the south, the Norwegian Sea and Atlantic Ocean to the west, the Berents Sea to the North, and Russia, Finland, and Sweden to the east. The northernmost part of the country extends into the Arctic Circle, while the border with Sweden runs along the Scandinavian mountains, with the highest peak having an elevation of 8,100 feet. Norway’s coastline is slashed with countless fjords, which have long provided excellent harbors for this traditionally seafaring people. With an area of 148,746 square miles, Norway is about the same size as Montana. Approximately 66% of Norway is tundra, glacier, rock or snowfields, 25% is forested, and only 3 to 4% is arable. Norway’s climate is not as cold as its latitude suggests, because the North Atlantic Drift brings warm, damp air to the whole country. The capital and largest city of Oslo, which is home to over 800,000 Norwegians, is the third largest city in Scandinavia, after Copenhagen and Stockholm.
Human settlement has been traced back 10,000 years to the Paleolithic age. Archeological evidence has revealed the remains of settlers from Doggerland, an area that is now submerged in the North Sea.
Noted Norwegian-Americans
Norway is one of the most prosperous countries in the world, boasting the second highest GDP per-capita (after Luxembourg) in the world. Norway was ranked first in the world in the UNDP Human Development Index (HDI) for six consecutive years (2001-2006), and came in second in 2007/2008. In 2009, Norway returned to its first-place ranking on the HDI. Norway has achieved its prosperity by means of a mixed economy, featuring a combination of free market activity and substantial government ownership in key industrial sectors, such as the strategic petroleum sector (StatoilHydro), hydroelectric energy production (Statkraft), aluminum production (Norsk Hydro), the largest Norwegian bank (DnB NOR) and telecommunication provider (Telenor). In fact, the government controls 31.6% of publicly-listed companies. Norway is richly endowed with natural resources including petroleum, hydropower, fish, forests, and minerals. Large reserves of petroleum and natural gas were discovered in the 1960s, which has led to continuing prosperity.
Barack Obama Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
Norway is a parliamentary democracy and constitutional monarchy governed by a prime minister, a cabinet, and the 169-seat Storting (parliament), which is elected every four years and cannot be dissolved. Free and fair elections to the multiparty parliament have been held at regular intervals during Norway’s 100 years of independence, with the sole exception of the years of German occupation from 1940 to 1945. Civilian authorities generally maintain effective control of the security forces.
Benson K. Whitney served as the US Ambassador to Norway from November 28, 2005. Until June 20, 2009. He received his BA magna cum laude from Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, and earned his JD from the University of Minnesota Law School in Minneapolis. His father, Wheelock Whitney, Jr., was a classmate of George H.W. Bush at Phillips Andover Academy.
Kåre R. Aas, a veteran of Norway’s foreign ministry, presented his credentials as his nation’s ambassador to the United States to President Barack Obama on September 17, 2013. It’s the second ambassadorial posting for Aas.
Aas was born May 25, 1955. He is from the Tøyen neighborhood in Oslo and is the son of a construction worker. He was initially ticketed for vocational school, but was able to talk his way into a more academic setting. Aas joined the foreign ministry in 1983 and his early years there included postings in Santiago, Chile, and Geneva, Switzerland.
In 1995, Aas was made deputy director in the foreign affairs ministry, and the following year he was sent to Brussels as a minister in Norway’s delegation to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, remaining there until 2001.
Aas returned to Oslo to work in the foreign ministry. In 2003 he was chosen to head the ministry’s security department. In that role, he managed bilateral relationships with the United States, Russia and central Asian republics. From 2005 to 2007, Aas was Norway’s representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency’s board of governors.
In 2008, Aas won his first posting as an ambassador, to Afghanistan. Much of his work there involved seeing that Norway’s funding for school construction was put to good use. Aas returned to Oslo in 2010 to become political director for the foreign ministry. He served in that role until being appointed to the Washington post. The oil business is important to Norway, so Aas’ first trip after coming to the United States was to Houston, where he met with energy company officials.
Norway traditionally provides the Christmas tree for Washington’s Union Station. For his first Christmas in Washington, Aas had the tree decorated with 700 reflectors with an image of “The Scream”, the iconic painting by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. It’s Norwegian custom to have children wear reflectors so they’re able to be seen in the dark.
Aas has four children; three daughters and one son. He makes a point of getting up early to go for a run through the streets of Washington.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Our Man In Washington (by Eivind Saether, Dagens Naeringliv)
President Barack Obama has chosen a strong supporter of his 2008 campaign rival, Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) to be the next ambassador to Norway. Nominated September 10, George Tsunis contributed $50,000 to McCain’s 2008 presidential run before switching parties in 2009 and becoming a major donor to Obama’s 2012 re-election run. Tsunis is the chairman and CEO of Chartwell Hotels, which owns, develops and manages Hilton, Marriott and Intercontinental hotels in Pennsylvania, New York, New Hampshire and Rhode Island, and manages his family’s portfolio of real estate holdings.
Because of his business’s presence in northern Pennsylvania, Tsunis told the National Herald that he has taken advantage of the growth of natural gas fracking by “providing a lot of the picks and shovels for the Marcellus Shale.”
If confirmed by the Senate, Tsunis would succeed Barry B. White, who left Oslo in September after a four-year stint as ambassador.
Tsunis’ father, James Tsunis, along with his cousin Charles, owned coffee shops and then developed the Bonwit Inn on Long Island in 1971, eventually investing in hotels and real estate.
Born in 1968, George James Tsunis earned a BA at New York University in 1989 and a JD at St. John’s University School of Law in 1992.
First bitten by the political bug in the 1980s, Tsunis’s first political work was as an aide to Sen. Alfonse D’Amato (R-New York), who served in the U.S. Senate from 1981 to 1999. In 1993, Tsunis ran a losing campaign as a GOP candidate for the Suffolk County Legislature, and in 1999 he was finance coordinator for Suffolk County Executive Robert Gaffney's re-election campaign.
After registering as a Democrat in November 2009, Tsunis raised at least $500,000 for Obama’s 2012 campaign, and donated $300,000 to Democratic super PACs and $75,800 to the Obama Victory Fund, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. According to state records, Tsunis and his wife, Olga, have given $115,000 to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s 2014 re-election campaign.
As a practicing attorney, Tsunis was a partner at the law firm of Rivkin Radler LLP, which is Long Island’s largest law firm, practicing land use and zoning, real estate, corporate, municipal law and commercial litigation.
Tsunis has engaged in public service over the years, including as a legislative attorney for the New York City Council, special counsel to the Town of Huntington Environmental Open Space Committee, and as counsel to the Dix Hills Water District. He also made a $1.25 million gift to Stony Brook University for the creation of the George and Olga Tsunis Center in Hellenic Studies and The James and Eleni Tsunis Chair in Hellenic Studies, the latter in honor of Tsunis’ parents.
A member of the Archdiocesan Council of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, Tsunis is an archon of the Ecumenical Patriarchate (Order of Saint Andrew)—the highest ecclesiastical honor that can be bestowed upon a layman—and serves on its National Council.
Tsunis’ only foreign policy experience consists of memberships on the Brookings Institution Foreign Policy Leadership Committee and its Metropolitan Leadership Council, as well as on Business Executives for National Security.
George Tsunis has been married to his wife Olga (Antzoulis) since November 2004. They live in Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, with their three children.
-Matt Bewig
To Learn More:
George Tsunis of Cold Spring Harbor nominated to be Ambassador to Norway (by Tom Brune, Newsday)
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