Husband-and-wife ambassadors head to Europe

Posted By Josh Rogin Share

The Washington "power couple" is a familiar model: officials are often hitched to journalists, staffers to academics, lawmakers with lobbyists, and on and on. It's a natural phenomenon in such a small and social town filled with so many policy professionals.

But in what is much less common, a husband-and-wife team is set to represent the United States as ambassadors in adjoining European countries. Mary Bruce Warlick is set to be confirmed as the U.S. ambassador to Serbia and her husband James Warlick is on his way to represent America as ambassador to Bulgaria.

"This is actually the first time ever in the history of our diplomatic corps where we're having hearings for a husband-and-wife team at the same time," Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-NH, said at the couple's confirmation hearing on Wednesday.

"They can meet up at the border," noted a congressional staffer with a smile.

Mary Warlick was most recently the acting deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine, and Eurasian policy in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Prior to that, she was the acting deputy assistant secretary for European and NATO policy.

James Warlick was principal deputy assistant secretary of state in the Bureau of International Organizations, and, prior to that, director of the Office of European Security and Political Affairs in State's Bureau of Eurasian and European Affairs.

The Warlicks aren't the only husband-and-wife team to find new homes in the administration. In fact, it turns out that these sorts of "Obamarriages" are surprisingly common.

Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia Kurt Campbell is married to Treasury under secretary nominee Lael Brainard. His former CNAS partner Michèle Flournoy, the new under secretary of defense for policy, attended the confirmation hearing for her husband, W. Scott Gould, on his way to becoming deputy secretary for veterans affairs.

The National Security Council's Samantha Power has a short walk if she wants to have lunch with her husband, White House regulatory czar Cass Sunstein. And White House Communications Director Anita Dunn shares a commute (although not for long) with her husband Robert Bauer, the next White House counsel.

And there are many more: Shere Abbott and James Steinberg, Sarah Feinberg and Dan Pfeiffer, Antony Blinken and Evan Ryan, Tom Donilon and Cathy Russell, just to name a few. 

 
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EXAMB

6:14 AM ET

November 20, 2009

Tandem Ambassadorial Assignments

I date myself, but the first tandem assignments, I believe, were Carole Laise (Nepal) and Ellsworth Bunker (Vietnam.) I hesitate to comment on the carbon emissions emitted by Bunker's monthly jet flights to Kathmandu. But both were successful ambassadors, she, probably, more so than he.

 

DARKO ZUPANIC

2:33 PM ET

November 20, 2009

I don't think that's a very

I don't think that's a very good idea. What if two neighboring countries are not in good relations and one of the Tandem partners is more under some kind of influence of hosting country? It would be bed as for at list one of the countries and also for adequate judgment of the USA.

 

RLDCSS

3:11 PM ET

November 20, 2009

Tandem ambassadors

Kristie Anne Kenney is Ambassador to the Philippines. Her husband William R. Brownfield is Ambassador to Colombia.

 

Josh Rogin reports on national security and foreign policy from the Pentagon to Foggy Bottom, the White House to Embassy Row, for The Cable.

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January/February 2010