Personalities

Ambassador Edward Peck, Exploration Lecturer

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Ambassador Edward Peck On Stage

He is marvelously entertaining while educating us and giving much to think about.

This is his resumé as published the Rotterdam's Daily Program:

Ambassador Peck served as an American diplomat for 32 years and speaks four languages: Swedish, Arabic, French, and Spanish. We would add English to that list and make it five languages. He was the chief of mission in Iraq from 1977 to 1980. He was also an Embassy officer in Sweden, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, and Egypt and a Chief of Mission in Mauritania.

His domestic assignments included Deputy Director of the Cabinet Task Force on Terrorism at the White House, Deputy Coordinator for Covert Intelligence Programs and Special Assistant to the Under Secretary for Political Affairs at the State Department, Liaison Officer to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and a Fellow at the Institute for Higher Defense Studies at the Pentagon.

Ambassador Peck retired to become Executive Secretary of the American Academy of Diplomacy in Washington, D.C., and was later named Chairman of Political Tradecraft programs at the National Foreign Affairs Training Center in Northern Virginia. He is a member of the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs, a Distinguished Visitor at the National War College, and a Woodrow Wilson Foundation Visiting Fellow. The ambassador also serves on the Board of Directors of Americans for Middle East Understanding.

A former paratrooper in the U.S. Army, Ambassador Peck rose from private to Captain. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from UCLA, and an M.M.A. from George Washington University.

Ambassador Peck has been there, he has the experience,
and his opinions do count:

I put Ambassador Edward Peck into the Google Search Engine, and had 36,000 documents in the list returned! Here are links to the first few documents of that list.

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Ed and Ann Peck at Lunch

I think this is a better picture than the one on the previous page because I didn't have to use a flash, which washes the color out of skin tones.

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Page last updated May 16, 2005.